By Kristy Dorsey A Scottish CBD company is gearing up to open its first retail shops following the appointment of two new non-executive directors. Perth-based Voyager Life, which is also preparing for a listing on the pan-European Aquis Growth Market, will open its first store in St Andrews in the middle of next month. A second shop from a shortlist of other Scottish sites is expected to open soon thereafter. Set up in November 2020 by chief executive Nick Tulloch, Voyager sells cannabidiol (CBD) and hemp seed oil products such as nutritional supplements, oils and soaps. The market for CBD, which comes from hemp but is not psychoactive, has been growing as an alternative for managing conditions such as anxiety, insomnia and chronic pain.
Court Reporter
Devon County Hall, where the inquest was held.
- Credit: Archant
Mystery surrounds why a 21-year-old painter and decorator hanged himself at a house where he had been working.
Joshua Samat had been working at a property on a plot on a building site in Chard, Somerset, last July.
An inquest heard his workmate Mark Underwood thought Joshua, of Victoria Road, Barnstaple, North Devon, had overslept when he could not wake him at their lodgings at 6am and he went to work alone.
But after completing his work on one house, Mr Underwood went to check on Joshua in a neighbouring property where he had been working the day before and found him hanging from a banister.
MILLY have shared their new single Birds Fly Free .
The group s new Wish Goes On EP is incoming, due for release via Dangerbird Records on April 9th.
Having shared stages with the likes of DIIV and Swervedriver, we re hearing definite shoegaze overtones to the band s songwriting.
It s all done from a distinctly Stateside vantage point, however, meaning its allowed to intermingle with slow core, and early 90s alt-rock.
Take new single Birds Fly Free . A fuzz-laden jammer that re-envisages J Mascis at the head of a dream pop outfit, it s a curiously contagious beast.
A further preview of their incoming EP, Birds Fly Free offers up dream-like indications of where MILLY could head next.
$1M lawsuit filed after Frisco apartment fire that displaced residents, injured firefighters
The lawsuit alleges that a faulty alarm and sprinkler system are to blame for the fire, which burned for more than 36 hours.
A Frisco fire truck is seen in this 2014 file photo. Firefighters last week battled a blaze at an apartment complex amid severe winter weather.(Michael Ainsworth - Staff Photographer)
Thirty-two residents of a Frisco apartment complex that caught on fire during last week’s severe winter weather are suing the owners of The Cortland at Stonebriar for more than $1 million.
The fire, which burned for more than 36 hours and temporarily displaced all of the 260-unit complex’s residents, sent one resident to the hospital with burn and smoke inhalation injuries. Four firefighters were also treated for minor injuries and later released.
Cortland at Stonebriar apartment residents sue for more than $1 million in damages, allege faulty fire alarm and suppression system
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All residents of the 260-unit Cortland at Stonebriar Complex were allegedly displaced by the Feb. 17 fire that burned for over 36 hours and required the assistance of fire units from five neighboring departments to get under control, according to official reports. According to these alleged reports, 62 of the units were completely destroyed, while others were impacted by water damage. Attorneys Zeke Fortenberry, Fortenberry Firm PLLC and Mark Underwood, Underwood Law Office, filed the petition in the Collin County District Court