NORML's Daily Audio Stash
The Growing Truth About Cannabis - s t a s h . n o r m l . o r g

 

Prime Advertisers


Contributions

Click here to donate to the NORML Daily Audio Stash by credit card, online, or by check
$
PayPal isn't "involved in this type of business"

Main Advertisers


NORML Information

  • * SPONSORED LINKS *

  • * Your Hosts *

  • Activism Resources

  • Allies

  • Blogroll

  • Bookshelf

  • Cannabis Community

  • Four-Twenty Comedy

  • Legal Issues

  • Marijuana Movies

  • Research

  • Toker Tunes

  • Web Design

  • Posts Tagged ‘felony’


    Man to police: You “missed it;” I’ve sold all my weed

    Wednesday, April 29th, 2009 at 8:20 am | By: Radical Russ

    What the hell is going on in Crestview, Florida? Are they running some sort of “blabber to the police” special I haven’t heard about?  Is there some sort of mad cow disease running rampant among the young?  Have evil scientists secretly created bud hybrids than make you extra stupid?

    (NW Florida Daily News) CRESTVIEW — Police executing a search warrant were told by the suspect they had “missed it” and he had just sold all of his marijuana, according to a Crestview Police Department arrest report.

    When officers stopped Justin Ray Smith, 19, on April 17, he said he had sold “somewhere between one to three pounds about six hours ago,” the report said. They recovered about $2,700, of which $1,100 was from that sale, Smith told officers, according to the report.

    Smith also said he had several baggies of marijuana in his room and he owned a digital scale. Officers also found a black duffel bag that Smith told officers had held 3½ pounds of marijuana.

    He was charged with felony possession with intent to distribute and possession of drug paraphernalia.

    Wait, they “stopped” Smith?  That doesn’t sound like executing a search warrant, that sounds like pulling someone over in a traffic stop, a cop asking, “smells funny, got weed?” and a damn fool saying, “Naw, I just sold it”, which then leads to a search warrant.  That’s a five year, $5,000, loss of voting rights, felony record lesson to learn.

    (NW Florida Daily News) CRESTVIEW — After pulling over a driver known not to have a valid license, a Crestview Police Department officer noticed that both the driver and the passenger appeared “very nervous.”

    When the officer asked them if they had anything in the vehicle like weapons or drugs, the driver, Kendal J. Watkins, said he had marijuana.

    The 21-year-old Crestview man then began pulling baggies of marijuana out of his pockets and the groin area of his pants, according to his arrest report.

    He was charged with felony possession of marijuana with intent to sell.

    So, you’re going to go out with trousers full of separately packaged doobage, driving a car while you don’t have a valid license.  Please tell me your passenger didn’t have a license, lest I have to browbeat you for not making him/her drive.  Not much he could’ve done here; the police would’ve taken him in for the driving without a license and found the weed anyway… but that doesn’t mean you make the policeman’s job easier!  Shut up and a refuse a search!  You don’t get any more busted when the cops find the weed you never mentioned and despite what they say, it won’t “go easier” on you if you hand them over evidence and confess to crimes (easier for them, sure).  Cha-ching, five years, $5,000.  Next!

    (NW Florida Daily News) CRESTVIEW — Crestview police arrested a man recently when he stepped out of a car covered in marijuana residue.

    Upon further investigation they also found baggies packaged for sale, an April 17 police report said.

    The driver of the car told officers that his passenger, James Knight, had to have brought the noxious herb into the car.

    “James must have had the marijuana with him, otherwise I wouldn’t have given him a ride,” the man told officers, according to the incident report.

    Knight, 30, was charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, resisting arrest and possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana.

    Covered in marijuana residue?  Were you rolling a joint on the dashboard and hit a bump?  What the hell is going on in Crestview, Florida?  Please, Northwest Floridians, send me an email at chapters@norml.org and let’s get you a NORML Chapter to start educating these people about their rights!

    Topics: , , , ,

    Related posts

    2009 NORML Foundation


    Virginia introduces new felony bill for over an ounce of marijuana

    Tuesday, January 20th, 2009 at 11:59 am | By: Radical Russ

    Virginia’s 2009 legislative session has only just begun and already a very bad bill, H.B. 1807, has been introduced that threatens to increase criminal penalties for marijuana offenses. In a time of budget crisis, Virginia legislators should be focusing on reducing governmental costs by exploring legislative options, including decriminalizing marijuana, not on increasing penalties and locking up more non-violent offenders.

    H.B. 1807 introduced by G. Manoli Loupassi (R-Richmond), would create a new added felony for transporting from one ounce to five pounds of marijuana into Virginia with an intent to sell. While the determination of an intent to sell is based on the totality of the circumstances, it is possible that police could try to use this unnecessarily-created felony to charge someone driving between their job in Washington, D.C. and their home in Virginia for possessing a little more than an ounce of marijuana. In that scenario, the individual could face an additional Draconian sentence of between one and five years in prison on top of the already harsh penalties for possession.

    In 2007, Virginia law enforcement arrested 19,606 people for marijuana offenses. With this change in policy, “thousands of hours of police time will be freed up, the equivalent of adding a lot of bodies to police forces. Court dockets will be stripped of thousands of cases, clearing the way for cases involving real crimes. Thousands of people won’t find their futures compromised by criminal records.” Maybe then we would have the money we need to pay teachers what they deserve? Fix roads?

    In fact the Virginia legislature convened a commission to study the marijuana laws and recommended decriminalization for many of the same reasons.

    It is time to enact the commission’s recommendations for Virginia and end the hopeless cycle of increased imprisonment and criminal sanction, an approach that historically has had the predictable results of increased violence and increased gang activity as well as increasing problematic drug use.

    America is waking up and realizing that after forty years of “lock ‘em up” hasn’t worked, maybe it is time to think of a smarter way to deal with marijuana.

    Topics: ,

    Related posts

    2009 NORML Foundation


    Indiana teen could get 16 years for fatal crash because of non-impairing pot metabolites in his blood

    Friday, October 10th, 2008 at 6:34 pm | By: Radical Russ

    [UPDATED and bumped - see below]

    Teen pleads in crash that killed 3 | www.jconline.com | Journal and Courier
    A Crawfordsville teenager has admitted to smoking marijuana about two weeks before causing a two-vehicle crash a year ago that killed two of his classmates and an Indianapolis woman. 

    Tyler R. Sutton, 18, pleaded guilty this morning in Tippecanoe Superior Court 2 to three counts of operating a vehicle with a controlled substance causing death and feticide, all Class C felonies.

    If Judge Thomas Busch accepts Sutton’s plea with the Tippecanoe County prosecutor’s office, at least two of those counts would have to be served concurrently – meaning the former North Montgomery High School student could spend up to 16 years in prison.

    Toxicology tests taken after the crash showed that Sutton had marijuana metabolites in his blood, though Sutton’s Indianapolis-based attorney, Dennis Zahn, disputed in court that the drug was present in the teen’s urine.

    Indiana law requires only that narcotic metabolites be present to establish impaired driving.

    Though Sutton also admitted to smoking marijuana, he said today that it was his first and only time.

    The teenager was 17 years old at the time of crash, but juvenile court Judge Loretta Rush waived him to adult court in March.

    Indiana is one of the states with a per se DUID statute.  In layman’s terms, that means if you test positive for any drug metabolite, you’ve been driving impaired in the eyes of the law.  That’s metabolites, not the actual drug, as would be the case with someone failing an alcohol breathalyzer.

    In the case of marijuana, inactive, non-impairing marijuana metabolites can remain detectable in one’s system for weeks days.  Tyler Sutton was no more [likely to be] an impaired driver than any other sober driver on the road; he just had the misfortune to smoke a joint a couple of weeks days prior to the wreck

    These insane per se statutes that count metabolites as impairment essentially mean that anyone who smokes marijuana in Nevada, Utah, Arizona, South Dakota, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Delaware, or Georgia and then drives anytime within the next day (for light, occasional tokers) to up to a month and a half week or more (for chronic tokers like me) is as guilty of a DUI as a drunk who blows over .08 BAC on a breathalyzer.

    [UPDATE: NORML’s Paul Armentano email’s me to say “No way marijuana metabolites are present in the blood two weeks later.  Huestis’s work documented residual THC-COOH metabolite levels in blood for 72+ hours (THC and 11-hydroxy THC were purged within hours), but two weeks?

    Read the rest of this entry by clicking here

    Topics: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

    Related posts

    2009 NORML Foundation


    New Orleans flooded… with felony marijuana cases

    Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008 at 3:36 pm | By: Radical Russ

    New Orleans CityBusiness — The Business Newspaper of Metropolitan New Orleans
    Shortly after Keva Landrum-Johnson took over as district attorney following Eddie Jordan’s resignation Oct. 30, hundreds of new felony cases flooded the public defenders office, overwhelming the 29 defense attorneys.

    After New Orleans regained its title as the nation’s murder capital, the public demanded its city leaders crack down on violent crime. By filing hundreds of new felony cases each month, it appeared as if the new DA heeded their call.

    Unfortunately, this wasn’t the case, said Steve Singer, chief of trials for the Orleans Public Defenders Office.

    The flood of new felony charges didn’t target murderers, rapists or armed robbers — they targeted small-time marijuana users, sometimes caught with less than a gram of pot, and threatened them with lengthy prison sentences.

    The resulting impact has clogged the courts with non-violent, petty offenses, drained the resources of the criminal justice system and damaged low-income African-American communities, Singer said.

    Landrum-Johnson’s decision to accept felony charges on people arrested for second and third marijuana possession offenses is a dramatic break from the tactics of former DAs Jordan and Harry Connick.

    A first-time marijuana possession charge in Louisiana is a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in prison but typically results in a small fine. A second offense is a felony that can carry up to five years in jail and a third offense up to 20 years.

    Under Jordan and Connick, however, second and third offenses were routinely reduced to misdemeanors that typically did not require a trial. This freed up public resources to be spent on violent crimes as opposed to minor, victimless offenses, Singer said.

    Landrum-Johnson was unavailable for comment but her spokesman Dalton Savwoir said that while he agreed there has been an increase in second and third offense marijuana felony acceptances, the increase is not attributable to a change in policy.

    “Rather, the increase is a result of the fact that during 2008, it has become easier to obtain certified copies of prior convictions (that are) required evidence (to prosecute) second and third offense marijuana cases,” Savwoir said.

    In other words, Savwoir said, clerical malfunctions that prevented the DA from seeking felony prosecutions of marijuana cases in the past have been rectified.

    None of this would have anything to do with Keva Landrum-Johnson running for a judgeship in Orleans Criminal District Court, would it?  Surely this increase in felony prosecution for minor marijuana charges is solely because they fixed a clerical glitch, not because someone running a political campaign wants to point to her high felony prosecution record and proclaim how “tough on crime” she is.

    Topics: , , ,

    Related posts

    2009 NORML Foundation
  • Get the Daily Audio Stash player for your website!

  • NORML's Activist's Alerts
    NORML Daily Audio Stash Activist's Agenda

  • Stash Login

    Register  |  Login
  • Stashers Online

  • Fresh Stash V

    Latest on Sat, 09:00 pm

    SneakerPimp: best NSL yet :bongin:

    RevRayGreen: AZ 31 OR 24

    MrSpof: Didn't catch all the show but the sound quality I heard was :2thumbs: :bongin:

    RevRayGreen: AZ 24 OR 21 10 minutes left in the 4th

    SneakerPimp: its nsl time

    thaistik: Congrats on the new family addition MrSpof.

    MrSpof: @RRG: pretty sure that pic puts you in the running for coolest, laid back Dad evar :2thumbs:

    RevRayGreen: it's a Family Affair stash IN....

    RevRayGreen: great fam MH.....

    RevRayGreen: very....

    Missippi Hippy: He looks ornery Rev

    Missippi Hippy: Me, 4 of 5 kids, their spouses and the grandkids. http://tr.im/FsMN Hope y'all can get in.

    RevRayGreen: http://tinyurl.com/yzvg8s6

    RevRayGreen: I'll post a pic of me and my son....gimme a minute

    Missippi Hippy: Guess what... I'm gonna be a new... ummmmm well, my pet piggie Ganja is in labor and they ain't mine in the same sense. See what your wife [...]

    RevRayGreen: days they didn't talk back..or act disrespectful..

    RevRayGreen: feel so lucky my son is 18 going 19 and my daughter 16 going on 17..relish the days that can't talk back

    Urb Age: Congrats Spof thats awesome. My little Clara is about to hit 20 months. Im not the activist I used to be, but its made me a better man. :bongin:

    Urb Age: Heck I was gonna go up there, but just not feeling well this weekend..Dang it, I hate it when that happens..

    RevRayGreen: wishing I was hanging at NORML cafe...

    JohnH: Just a quick comment about tokin' and sperm motility....been tokin since age 14 and have 8 kids ranging in age from 30 to 9...(what can I say, I found 2 [...]

    slash5city: really ..oprah 35 yr or more in the closet toker ...outed ....o my god !!

    SneakerPimp: that would be huge news just imagen the headline :cool:

    RevRayGreen: maybe Oprah smokes and keeps it on the DL...

    SneakerPimp: :420: :bongin: and good afternoon

    Fresh Stash V RSS Feed

    Log in to post a comment.




  • Click here to find the codes to make smilies
  • Advertisers


  • The Stash Pot Quiz

    When pot is made legal, a fair price for a 1/8 ounce purchase would be...

    View Results

    Loading ... Loading ...
  • Important Stash

  • Stash Categories

  • 420 Tweets (@RadicalRuss, @NORML, @High_Times_Mag, @CelebStoner)

    Initializing...
  • “Radical” Russ Photos from “Puff Puff Pass” Tour

  • Stash Comments

  • RSS NORML Weekly News

    • 11-20 NORML News PodCast - Nov 20, 2009
      Marijuana-Related Health Costs Minimal Compared To Those Of Alcohol, Tobacco; California Medical Association Says Pot Prohibition Is A "Failed Public Health Policy"; Oregon: State NORML Affiliate Opens First 'Cannabis Café'. […]
    • 11-13 NORML News PodCast - Nov 13, 2009
      American Medical Association Calls For Scientific Review Of Marijuana's Prohibitive Status; Dutch Marijuana Use Lower Than European Average, Study Says […]
    • 11-06 NORML News PodCast - Nov 6, 2009
      "Truth In Trials Act" Reintroduced In Congress; Maine: Voters Approve Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Measure; Colorado: Breckenridge Voters Overwhelmingly Decide To End Pot Penalties. […]
  • RSS NORML Special Events

    • NORML CON 2009 - Cannabis and Athleticism
      Some of the nation’s top athletes discuss why today's pros are turning to cannabis — and away from alcohol and painkillers — off the field, and question why pro sports leagues are continuing to sanction those who do. Moderator: Steve Bloom, Author, Pot Culture; editor, celebstoner.com * Toby Grear, MMA fighter * Sean Neumann, Documentary Filmm […]
    • NORML CON 2009 - Rick Steves Keynote
      PBS TV star and European Travel Guru Rick Steves' keynote address to close NORML Conference 2009 […]
    • NORML CON 2009 - Putting the Mexican Cartels Out of Business
      Cannabis Law Reform's Missing Link: Law Enforcement Former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper; LEAP and NORML Advisory Board; Author of Breaking Rank Putting the Mexican Cartels Out of Business Mexican drug cartels now employ over 100,000 soldiers and are responsible for nearly ten thousand deaths per year. Their largest source of income is marijuana. […]
  • Stash by Date

    November 2009
    S M T W T F S
    « Oct    
    1234567
    891011121314
    15161718192021
    22232425262728
    2930  
  • Stash Archives