Massachusetts’ Revolutionary Clinics, which is trying to settle debts, has sued Albert Einstone Cannabis to get its products back into its stock. Revolutionary Clinics, which owed its principal lender $10 million in addition to thousands in unpaid rents in December, entered receivership.
According to the cannabis company, it was responsible for wholesale distribution and packaging of Albert Einstone MA products in its Fitchburg location. RevClinics (as it is called in this lawsuit) paid AEM royalty payments each month and held title and ownership to the product.
According to the complaint, on December 7, 2024 individuals entered Fitchburg, took 905 packages of AEM product and delivered them Solar Therapeutics. RevClinics says that a former company employee helped individuals take the product without being detected. RevClinics claimed it reached out Robert Keller from Solar to arrange the return of products. The parties had agreed on the return of products by January 14th.
Keller said that his driver had been sick that day and that they would find a different solution. RevClimics says that Solar has never given RevClimics a delivery date and never returned any products. Solar may have sold or given some inventory away to an unidentified third party, according to the complaint.
RevClinics asks the court for Solar to return its products and pay RevClinics’ legal costs.
RevClinics wants to recover the stock in order to sell it and use the proceeds to pay some of the bills it has while in receivership.
LinkedIn says AEM, which is best known for their product El Blunto, was founded in California. This page states that the product is available at over 350 dispensaries throughout California. AEM does not provide any details about the locations in which their products are sold. AEM makes a drink called Stoneade.
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