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Hockey to Cannabis: Ed Snider's Daughter Eyes Medical Pot

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Lindy Snider won’t back down from a challenge. The daughter of late Flyers owner Ed Snider is among a select group of cannabis entrepreneurs waiting to enter the Pennsylvania market.

Despite having been rejected for a growing and processing facility, Snider has two applications pending for dispensaries in Center City and Delaware County.

“This is absolutely the perfect thing for me,” she said on a spring afternoon while talking to NBC10 at her Main Line mansion. “The benefit to Pennsylvania, overall, and Philadelphia, in particular, is staggering.”

Snider’s grand Tudor-style mansion matched her illustrious name. Dark wood and pastoral paintings adorned most of the walls. Antique medical instruments glistened behind a glass display. Several feet away, an oversized scrapbook dedicated to her father rested atop a vintage table. Photos of her family littered the sitting room and other nooks of the first floor.

“This is the party house,” she said. “It was made for entertaining.”

Underneath the Main Line trimmings is a killer instinct for what could become the state’s next cash crop: cannabis.

Snider is a longtime believer and early investor in the flourishing industry. Even before her father battled bladder cancer, she was drawn to tales of marijuana’s medicinal potential. The holistic culture surrounding cannabis plus its untapped financial opportunities seemed too great to ignore.

“I’m a business person,” she said. “Cannabis is sort of a no-brainer.”

And so she jumped headfirst into an industry once reserved for drug dealers.

Snider’s first stop was trade shows and conferences where she was shocked by the otherwise buttoned-up nature of attendees. There was nothing fringe about it, she said. Snider met industry leaders who were pouring serious money into innovation, technology and creating a startup culture unlike any other.

“That was really eye-opening,” she said.

Some of those people eventually became business partners in her early days as an investor. In 2015 she joined the board of Kind Financial, Los Angeles-based seed to sale technology company for cannabis compliance. She also invested in Poseidon Asset Manager, a cannabis hedge fund. More recently, Snider was added to the board of Greenhouse Ventures, a Philadelphia-based marijuana business accelerator.

Her tentacular ties have earned Snider the dubious labels of “pot tycoon” and “ganjapreneur.” Not everyone in the Main Line understands her interest in the industry, she said. Snider admits certain parents gave her a sideways look when these ventures became public. One commenter in a “Main Line Today” article even branded her family as “local drug lords.”

Snider welcomed the criticism.

“I like to shake things up a bit,” she said with a throaty laugh. “I’m a rabble rouser at heart.”

Estimates vary, but Pennsylvania’s medical marijuana program could rake in more than $125 million in its first year and grow at an annual rate of 180 percent, according to market research firm ArcView Group. The program is slated to debut early in 2018.

Snider has previously credited her Libertarian father with bestowing business acumen to his eagle-eyed daughter. She does not doubt that he would have approved of her business interests, having used it himself while in palliative care in California. 

“We saw him eat a really big meal after using the product when he really hadn’t been,” she said.

During his final years, Snider frequently talked to her dad about the cannabis industry. He was intrigued yet cautious. He warned against using the family name and worried that her reputation could be ruined, to which she simply answered: “I don’t have another name.”

Despite his misgivings, the elder Snider toyed with the idea of becoming a co-investor and, by the end of his life, had “dramatically” changed his perspective on the plant, his daughter said.

“Being a family that’s been very involved in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia for a long time both in business and in philanthropy, we see this as an unbelievable sort of dovetail of both those things,” she said.

It’s not just about philanthropy, however. Throwing her family’s weight behind marijuana is a form of legitimizing the industry, of raising it from a subculture to the mainstream. To that end, Snider and her husband - Dr. Larry Kaiser, president and CEO of Temple University Health System - regularly talk to their children about pot.

Snider has become the “cool mom” among her kids’ friends, she said. She tries to stay on message when the topic comes up, reinforcing the plant’s reputation as a panacea for epilepsy, autism and degenerative diseases.

“I’m a realist and I know kids are going to be kids and do things they shouldn’t do. I think it’s inherently built into every human being on the planet,” she said. “The best you can do is educate your kids and teach them to make good choices for themselves because you’re not always going to be around.”

Snider is not the only famous name to join Pennsylvania’s green rush. Former NFL player Eugene Monroe applied for a grow permit with his company Green Thumb Industries. Pro Football Hall of Fame running back Floyd Little sits on the board of Syracuse-based Terradiol, which applied for a cultivation permit in the southcentral region. And former lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania, Mark Singel, is also on the advisory team.

Coincidentally, State Sen. Mike Folmer, a Republican from Lebanon, co-sponsored Pennsylvania’s medical marijuana legislation. Like other advocates, Folmer turned to cannabis while fighting his own battles with cancer. The Republican used it while undergoing chemotherapy for non-Hodgkin lymphoma and his wife used it to treat neuropathic pain. He co-wrote legislation with Democratic Sen. Daylin Leach, an even more outspoken proponent of medical cannabis.

The bipartisan nature of the marijuana industry intrigued Snider, who doesn’t anticipate federal politics will interfere with the state’s nascent program.

“I don’t think anybody wants to get into a state’s rights fight,” she said of Attorney General Jeff Sessions. “It is his job to uphold the law and I think what we need to look at is changing the federal law.”



Photo Credit: AP

10 at 7: What You Need to Know Today

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Here are the 10 things you need to know to start your day from your friends at NBC10.


TODAY'S TOP STORY 

Police Pursuit Leads to Crash, Foot Chase Near Airport: A police pursuit of two armed robbery suspects ended with the men arrested near Philadelphia International Airport Thursday evening. State Police were chasing the suspects, wanted for an armed robbery in New Castle, Delaware when the vehicle they were driving veered off the roadway into a grassy median near I-95 and Route 420 around 8:30. Delaware State Police said both suspects were taken into custody after they tried to run away. Video captured by an NBC10 viewer showed one man in handcuffs near the airport lying on a middle barrier. Delaware State Police say it all started when two armed men robbed a T-Mobile store in New Castle then took off. Delaware State Troopers chased the men as they made their way across the border. No one was injured in the robbery or pursuit.

    YOUR FIRST ALERT FORECAST  

    The humidity could return for Friday along with could some thunderstorms that could linger into Saturday. Sunday and Monday could also see a chance of some showers. Get your full NBC10 First Alert forecast here.

    WHAT YOU MISSED YESTERDAY

    Witness Testifies in Trial Against Seth Williams: The trial against former District Attorney Seth Williams continued with a key witness testifying in the case on Thursday.

    AROUND THE WORLD

    North Korea Denies Torturing American Detainee Otto Warmbier: North Korea has denied it cruelly treated or tortured an American student who was detained for more than a year and died days after being released in a coma. The article published by the official Korean Central News Agency on Friday was Pyongyang's first reaction to the death of Otto Warmbier. North Korea released him last week for what it described as humanitarian reasons and he died Monday in a U.S. hospital. His family and others have blamed North Korea for his condition. KCNA says the North dealt with Warmbier according to domestic law and international standards. He had been accused of stealing a propaganda poster and was serving a sentence of hard labor. The article also criticized South Korea for using Warmbier's case to seek the release of other detainees.

      TODAY'S TALKER                

      Road Rage Sparks Chain Reaction Crash: A caught-on-camera road rage incident between a motorcyclist and a driver on a Southern California freeway led to a chain-reaction crash, sending an innocent person to the hospital Wednesday, authorities said. The crash occurred before 6 a.m. on the southbound 14 Freeway near Newhall in Santa Clarita. The passenger who shot the video said he started recording when a gray sedan inadvertently cut off a passing motorcyclist. The motorcyclist zooms up to the driver's side of the sedan and kicks the side of the vehicle. The sedan veered left, pinching the biker to the center divider before it swerved and crashed into the wall, hitting and flipping a Chevy pickup truck over on its roof. The motorcyclist zooms past the collision. The man in the truck was sent to the hospital and is expected to recover, according to the California Highway Patrol.

      SPORTS SPOT

      Sixers Draft: The Sixers drafted Markelle Fultz as the No. 1 overall pick in the NBA draft Thursday night. Get your full sports news at CSNPhilly.

      PHOTO OF THE DAY

      See more Top News Photos here.

      THROUGH IGER'S EYES

      @tkroljic captured this image of a Race Street Pier.

      Have an awesome Instagram photo you'd like to share? Tag it with #NBC10Buzz.

      TODAY'S VIRAL VIDEO

      How to cook for 10 people with $10: Click here to watch.

      A LITTLE SWEETENER 

      Twilight Wish Foundation Honors Veteran: One lucky veteran watched the Phillies take a win on Thursday thanks to the Twilight Wish Foundation. Jonathan Hilson was nominated for the wish by his caregiver, who wanted to honor his military service. Read more.


      That's what you need to know. We've got more stories worthy of your time in the Breakfast Buzz section. Click here to check them out


      This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser.

      FedEx Truck Jackknifes, Snarls Connector Between Turnpikes

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      A FedEx truck jackknifed on the connector bridge between the New Jersey and Pennsylvania turnpikes Friday morning causing traffic troubles.

      Photo Credit: SkyForce10

      Obituary for Girl, 15, Who Died by Suicide Blames Bullies

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      The family of a 15-year-old Pennsylvania girl who killed herself Monday is blaming school bullies, and the school district's superintendent isn't disputing their claims.

      Sadie Riggs' family posted her obituary on Facebook after she died Monday. They say she was in counseling and took medications for emotional issues complicated by bullying, much of it on social media.

      Bedford Area Superintendent Allen Sell says he can't comment on the specific situation, but said policing social media bullying is difficult because schools don't have jurisdiction if it takes place outside school hours. The district is offering counseling to students affected by Sadie's death, even though it's summer vacation.

      Sadie's family tells the unnamed bullies, "Please know you were effective in making her feel worthless." They're asking people to "be kind to one another" instead of sending flowers.

      SUICIDE PREVENTION HELP: The National Suicide Prevention Hotline (1-800-273-8255) is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.



      Photo Credit: Facebook

      Philly Taxi Driver Shot Twice During Robbery

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      A Philadelphia taxi driver is out of the hospital after being shot twice during a robbery.

      Police say that around noon Wednesday, a 62 year-old Ajax Francois was robbed by two men at 39th and Ogden Streets.

      Francois was shot twice in the leg, and had his cell phone and $400 taken during the incident.

      Francois drives for the Philadelphia Cab Company. He was transferred to Hahnemann Hospital in stable condition before being released.

      Residents Protest Health Care Bill Outside Toomey's Office

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      A protest of the Republican health care bill took place this morning outside of Senator Pat Toomey's Old City office. Toomey was one of the key writers of the plan that now will be decided in Washington D.C.

      Photo Credit: NBC10

      Jehovah's Witness Convention Comes to Temple University

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      Conventions aren’t new to Philadelphia, but for the next four weeks, there will be some different faces making their way around Temple University.

      Starting today, the 2017 Regional Convention of Jehovah’s Witnesses will be take over Temple University’s Liacouras Center for the next four weekends.

      The convention is expected to draw nearly 25,000 people of the faith, from around the region, for the three-day convention. The gathering will feature speeches, prayers, Biblical recitations, and multi-media presentations.

      While the convention is free to the attendees, the convention’s pamphlet asks that those who attend make contributions to the faith’s governing body.

      Other Jehovah’s Witness conventions will be put on around the country at the same time, and will be geared towards the theme “Don’t Give Up.”

      Philadelphia’s conventions will take place Friday through Sunday on the following weekends:

      June 23-25

      June 30- July 2

      July 7- July 9

      July 14- July 16

      For a look at the teachings of the faith, click here.




      Photo Credit: Getty Images

      Ice Cream Shop Owner Uses Hidden Cam on Underage Workers: PD

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      Police in South Jersey charged an ice cream shop owner with putting cameras in an employee changing room and spying on underage girls.

      Vineland police officers raided Cool Breeze Ice Cream Parlor on W Landis Avenue on Thursday after receiving information Monday that owner Larry Bostic could be “inappropriately video monitoring his employees while they were in the changing room,” police said in a news release.

      Detectives interviewed various employees before serving a search warrant on the Cool Breeze on Thursday. During that search, investigators found a small camera “surreptitiously placed inside the employee changing room,” police said.

      The camera was linked to a monitor in Bostic’s locked office, police said.

      Police identified all the victims as juvenile females.

      Bostic, 65, was charged with five counts each of child endangerment and invasion of privacy and sent to Cumberland County Jail. It was unclear if he had an attorney who could comment on the case.

      Police asked anyone who believes they could also be a victim to contact the Vineland Police Department Detective Bureau at 856-691-4111, ext. 4181.



      Photo Credit: Vineland Police

      What Do Jehovah’s Witnesses Believe?

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      <b> All information was gathered from the Jehovah’s Witnesses official website, and independent researchers.</b>

      - According religion archive Patheos, the faith was founded out of the Christian Millerite movement and has spread around the world.

      - The group donned the name Jehovah’s Witnesses in 1931, and also created a strong structure that helped grow the organization.

      - According to the official website, there are more than 8.3 million Jehovah’s Witnesses worldwide, and almost 120,000 congregations.

      - According to Pew, Jehovah’s Witnesses are racially diverse, being 36 percent White, 32 percent Hispanic, and 27 percent Black.

      - Jehovah’s Witnesses root their faith directly in Biblical text and ignore human interpretations. Therefore they do not celebrate traditionally Christian holidays like Easter and Christmas.

      - Unlike traditional Christianity, they view God as the only higher power. While they believe Jesus is the son of God, they reject the belief that he and the Holy Spirit are equal to God.

      - Jehovah’s Witnesses do not believe in purgatory, and also believe that after one dies, one's existence completely stops, with the possibility of being resurrected by God.

      - Their teachings follow the belief that Satan is the source of all evil, and that protection from Satan can be achieved via faith and study with other members of the faith.

      - Jehovah’s Witnesses have no clergy, but rather task congregations with choosing elders. The elders are typically older man who become the main teachers and counselors.

      - Best know from going door to door in a neighborhood near you, Jehovah’s Witnesses stop at houses to preach their beliefs to “make disciples of people of all the nations.”

      - Jehovah’s Witnesses do not accept blood transfusions; do not believe in going to war, and do not claim the cross as a symbol of Christianity.

      Celebrate The Luck Of The Irish

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      The First Havertown Irish Festival is happening Saturday at the Manoa Shopping Center.

      Philly Police Save Deer from Delaware River

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      Philadelphia Police came to the rescue of a wayward deer who became trapped in the Delaware River Thursday evening.

      The deer was trapped in thick mud in a basin next to the Chart House restaurant at South Streets and Christopher Columbus Boulevard on Penn's Landing.

      After police received several calls, the Marine Unit was dispatched to rescue the animal.

      Sgt. Gregory Caputo said when he and his unit arrived, the deer had freed himself from the mud, but was swimming around looking for a way out of the water. At one point, he swam under a run down pier, Caputo said.

      Armed with a dog lasso, the officers were able to snag the deer and pull him out of the 4-foot deep water.

      "It didn't give us any struggles or any issues. Once we got it onto the boat, we were able to cover it with a blanket just to prevent it from moving around just so it didn't injure any of the officers on-board," Caputo said.

      Caputo and his unit had an an audience of onlookers for the rescue who were thrilled to see the animal saved.

      "Customers from the Chart House were all out on the balcony and they all applauded for us," Caputo said.

      Officers took the deer to a nearby wooded area, where the animals frequent, and set him free.



      Photo Credit: Philadelphia Police
      This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser.

      Thunderstorms Threaten Weekend Activities

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      Any outdoor events scheduled for this weekend are in jeopardy as thunderstorms are expected to move through our region. NBC10's Deanna Durante spoke to some kids who say the rain makes them extra grumpy.

      Stopping Stop-and-Go Alcohol Sales

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      Germantown residents are trying to stop stop-and-go alcohol sales in their neighborhood. NBC10's Aundrea Cline-Thomas spoke to the Fit 30 group who is leading the movement.

      Businessman Testifies About Help From Seth Williams

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      One businessman testified in federal court on Friday, claiming that DA Seth Williams offered to help him with several things. But, defense lawyers argued that Williams never actually did anything to help.

      NBC10 First Alert Weather: Thunderstorms Headed Our Way

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      If you have outdoor plans for Saturday, you may want to reconsider. Thunderstorms are headed toward our region, and NBC10 Chief meteorologist Glenn "Hurricane" Schwartz has all the details you need.


      Prom Held for Senior Citizens

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      Plenty of dancing, partying, and singing took place at the Courtland Life Germantown Center on Friday, as the senior citizens there celebrated prom! NBC10's Erin Coleman spoke to some of the party-goers to see what the day meant to them.

      Soda Tax Hearing Canceled

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      City Hall was packed full on Friday with supporters of the soda tax, but the hearing was canceled. NBC10's Jim Rosenfield has the story.

      Worry Over How Medicaid Cuts Could Hinder Opioid Addiction Treatment

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      With potential cuts to Medicaid being weighed in Congress under the new GOP health care proposal, families, people in the throes of addiction and lawmakers are concerned cuts will cut back treatment offerings.

      Officer Flips Bike During Training

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      In Delaware County, you should be careful where you ride your bike. One officer learned that when he flipped his bike during a training. Luckily, the officer was okay.

      Deer Rescued From Delaware River

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      Philadelphia police rushed to the Delaware River on Thursday for a rescue, but not the type of rescue you would expect. Police saved a deer that was stuck in the river.

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