Lawsuit claims cannabis companies intentionally made false claims about medical benefits - Herald-Review.com
Lawsuit claims cannabis companies intentionally made false claims about medical benefitsHerald-Review.
In recent months, there had been a lot of drama in the AEW locker room involving various names.
The All Out incident, in which CM Punk vented his frustrations with Hangman Page, Colt Cabana, and The Elite before engaging in a backstage brawl with The Elite, was the most notable. There was also the incident in which Eddie Kingston piefaced Sammy Guevara, as well as the brawl between Andrade and Guevara.
Former WWE star EC3 recently claimed that William Regal was frustrated with talent who did not accept his offers to coach them before AEW shows and believed management lacked maturity.
Regal, as PWMania.com previously reported, has left AEW and will reportedly return to WWE after the new year when his contract with the rival promotion expires this month.
According to BJ Bethel of SEScoops, several AEW sources said the claims made by EC3 about Regal are false and blasted Carter for spreading them. According to one source, it is “completely inaccurate.”
Another source “noted Carter [EC3] and James are being frustrated themselves at not landing jobs in AEW, and neither them nor [Vince] Russo have ever been with the company.”
The report cited a source who stated, “There was no formal coaching session, where it was something that was scheduled or anything like that. Usually he would go down to the ring to help someone, and word would spread, like, “Hey, Regal is down in the ring.”
This same source went on to say that Dustin Rhodes trains younger women’s wrestlers on the roster...
Lawsuit claims cannabis companies intentionally made false claims about medical benefitsHerald-Review.