City, county officers harvest marijuana crop
The News Review:
- City, county officers harvest marijuana crop
- Relatively Peaceful Weekend for UCPD, IVFP as SB Students Return
- Update: D’Angelo Okay After Virginia Car Crash
- DEAD IN JAIL
- Japanese Marine Sells Drug On Internet
- Rhode Island news | projo.com | The Providence Journal | Northwest
- Anti-War Voices from Montana
City, county officers harvest marijuana crop
Princeton Times Leader - Sep 26, 2005
Eric Smith display the 13 marijuana plants seized in connection with a Donaldson Road investigation. The marijuana carries a street value of about $26,000, officers said. Monday, September 26, 2005The year’s first major marijuana harvest by county law enforcement officers occurred Thursday morning, near an abandoned trailer on Donaldson Road, north of Princeton. Deputy Brock Thomas said the find came at about 11 a. Thursday, after he, Princeton Police Det. Eric Smith and Probation and Parole Officer Chris Holt traveled to that area to execute a search warrant… Eric Smith and Probation and Parole Officer Chris Holt traveled to that area to execute a search warrant. Investigation led the officers to an abandoned trailer in the 1200 block of Donaldson Road. Inside the trailer, they found a small amount of loose marijuana in a cigar box. Several items of drug paraphernalia were also found inside the trailer, Thomas said. A search of the surrounding property led to the discovery of 13 marijuana plants growing nearby. Ten were found growing in a fencerow about 200 yards from the trailer, and three more were located in a barn about 500 yards away, he said. Each plant had an estimated street value of $2,000, said Sheriff Stan Hudson, giving the haul a total value of $26,000, not including the value of the loose marijuana inside the residence.
Relatively Peaceful Weekend for UCPD, IVFP as SB Students Return
Daily Nexus - Sep 26, 2005
, as well as a 24-year-old man on Mesa Road. Signa said there were a few more citations over the weekend than last year, but overall the UCPD did not have too many problems over the weekend. “There were a few more marijuana citations than last year, but other than that it was a calm start of the school year,” Signa said. “None of the UCPD officers worked overtime. ” UCPD officers also issued five citations for possession of marijuana, four of which were given to high school students from the Thousand Oaks area, Signa said. The students were smoking marijuana in a UCSB parking lot on Saturday at 1 p… “There were a few more marijuana citations than last year, but other than that it was a calm start of the school year,” Signa said. “None of the UCPD officers worked overtime. ” UCPD officers also issued five citations for possession of marijuana, four of which were given to high school students from the Thousand Oaks area, Signa said. The students were smoking marijuana in a UCSB parking lot on Saturday at 1 p. Officers also cited three of the students for violating the Santa Barbara County 10 p.
Update: D’Angelo Okay After Virginia Car Crash
Billboard - Sep 26, 2005
Just prior to the accident, D’Angelo was given a three-year suspended sentence after pleading no contest to felony cocaine possession in Chesterfield Circuit Court. As previously reported, he was arrested near Richmond in January after police found marijuana and cocaine in his car during a traffic stop. CM8ShowAd(”Middle”); D’Angelo received a 100-day suspended sentence in April stemming from the marijuana and driving under the influence charges.
DEAD IN JAIL
Washington Post - Sep 26, 2005
jail for lack of a respirator. Why was he in jail?: He smoked marijuana to alleviate his suffering. residents (citizens is too elevated a word) had the democratic rights of, say, Basra, medical marijuana would be legal and.
Japanese Marine Sells Drug On Internet
Bernama - Sep 26, 2005
The police have arrested eight people involved, including six servicemen belonging to a submarine unit based in Yokosuka City, Kanagawa Prefecture, the leading daily said. They were suspected of possessing illegal drugs like marijuana and MDMA. Among the arrested was 22-year-old Takahiro Sakaguchi, who had been indicted by the police for transferring drugs. The police said Sakaguchi was selling drugs through the Internet for months. The marijuana was supplied by his brother living in the northern Hokkaido Prefecture where wild marijuana grows. They also have found at his home receipts suspected to come from drug transactions… Among the arrested was 22-year-old Takahiro Sakaguchi, who had been indicted by the police for transferring drugs. The police said Sakaguchi was selling drugs through the Internet for months. The marijuana was supplied by his brother living in the northern Hokkaido Prefecture where wild marijuana grows. They also have found at his home receipts suspected to come from drug transactions. The MSDF has set up a special task force to investigate the incident. — BERNAMA We provide (subscription-based) news coverage in our.
Rhode Island news | projo.com | The Providence Journal | Northwest
Providence Journal - Providence Journal (subscription) - Sep 26, 2005
The next day, public safety officers reported that they found O’Keefe smoking marijuana in his dorm room. That brought about another appearance before Judge Higgins, in which police accused O’Keefe of violating the terms of his release the day before. The suspect pleaded guilty to possessing marijuana. Higgins sentenced him to a year of probation, ordered him to pay court costs and undergo substance-abuse counseling. He also revoked the personal bail in the first case and set bail at $7,500, which O’Keefe posted.
Anti-War Voices from Montana
AlterNet - Sep 26, 2005
Democratic Governor Brian Schweitzer won a closely watched, highly publicized race in November, making him the state’s first Democratic governor since 1988. During that same election, 62 percent of Montana voters approved a medical marijuana initiative, the 11th state in the country — and the ninth Western state — to do so. The Schweitzer and medical marijuana victories came even as Montanans voted by wide margins to ban gay marriage and reelect George W. Bush for President. The state’s progressives are also proud of the fact that Jeannette Rankin, a Missoula, Montana native, was the first woman ever elected to Congress in 1916, four years before women nationwide won the right to vote. In 1917, Rankin joined a handful of representatives who voted against World War I, saying that the first time the first woman had a chance to say no against war she should say it. ” In 1941, Rankin was the only member of Congress to vote against World War II.