2 Texas students charged with sickening teachers with marijuana muffin…

The News Review:

- 2 Texas students charged with sickening teachers with marijuana muffin…
- Police discover cannabis crop
- Pot-growing case reduced to misdemeanor
- Woman pleads guilty to embezzlement: Toni U. Elliott took $91,640…
- High-tech eyes in the sky
- Educating the masses … King Drum Bagalaga continues the journey

2 Texas students charged with sickening teachers with marijuana muffin…
Free with registration – America's Intelligence Wire – AccessMyLibrary.com – May 27, 2006
2 Texas students charged with sickening teachers with marijuana muffins. | The America’s Intelligence Wire (May, 2006).

Police discover cannabis crop
Sunday Times.au – May 27, 2006
getElementById(“print-logo”)){ document. getElementById(“print-logo”).

Pot-growing case reduced to misdemeanor
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (subscription… – May 27, 2006
McCormack found Erick J. Schuchard guilty on Monday of two counts of marijuana possession and one count of possessing drug paraphernalia. Heoriginally was charged with manufacturing marijuana with intent to deliver, a felony for which he could have been sent to state prison for 10 years and fined $25,000 if convicted. He also was charged with marijuana possession, which carries a maximum fine of $1,000 and six months in jail. According to a criminal complaint filed in January 2005, police discovered a marijuana-growing operation while investigating the attempted burglary of a house next door to Schuchard’s parents’ home on N. Columbia Drive in Mequon. Mequon police wanted to examine a pair of shoes belonging to Schuchard to see whether they matched footprints found at the house next door… Schuchard guilty on Monday of two counts of marijuana possession and one count of possessing drug paraphernalia. Heoriginally was charged with manufacturing marijuana with intent to deliver, a felony for which he could have been sent to state prison for 10 years and fined $25,000 if convicted. He also was charged with marijuana possession, which carries a maximum fine of $1,000 and six months in jail. According to a criminal complaint filed in January 2005, police discovered a marijuana-growing operation while investigating the attempted burglary of a house next door to Schuchard’s parents’ home on N. Columbia Drive in Mequon. Mequon police wanted to examine a pair of shoes belonging to Schuchard to see whether they matched footprints found at the house next door. But Schuchard’s father, Gregory Schuchard, refused to turn over the shoes without a search warrant, so Mequon officers returned with a warrant.

Woman pleads guilty to embezzlement: Toni U. Elliott took $91,640…
Free with registration – Times-News – AccessMyLibrary.com – May 27, 2006
In exchange for her guilty plea, she received a suspended sentence of six to eight months and five years of probation. The judge also reduced the amount of restitution she had to pay and remitted her probation fee. Charles Edwin Carter, 27, of Elon Court, Elon, pleaded guilty to selling marijuana, delivering marijuana and maintaining a dwelling for a controlled substance. He received a suspended sentence of 11 to.

High-tech eyes in the sky
Seattle Times – May 27, 2006
Davis flipped a switch, and the ferry’s smokestacks glowed white on the plane’s on-board computer screen. “See how hot they are?” he asked, demonstrating the camera’s heat-detecting capabilities. Though the State Patrol has used airplanes since 1959 to catch speeders, aggressive drivers and marijuana growers, it used to be that pilots could eyeball incidents only from the sky and radio information to law enforcement on the ground. Late last year, the State Patrol received a $982,000 grant from the U. Department of Defense’s Terrorist Readiness Initiative Fund and equipped two of its Cessnas with FLIR — Forward Looking Infra Red — camera systems that can zoom in on suspects and detect body heat, said Lt. Tristan Atkins, who supervises the patrol’s aviation section.

Educating the masses … King Drum Bagalaga continues the journey
SUN Weekend – May 27, 2006
”But educating the masses did not come easily. “The government used to send police to raid us, lock us down, bring us down to station. “When the police hold a rasta with marijuana, they get a raise, a different bonus, so the lock us down whether we right or wrong,” Bagalaga said. “You know marijuana is our sacrament. In united snakes of murdica, they ban marijuana in 1938 and so they hold us here too. ”The struggle was a difficult one. “Every day police and rastas get into something, the people in society didn’t like the natty dreads… “The government used to send police to raid us, lock us down, bring us down to station. “When the police hold a rasta with marijuana, they get a raise, a different bonus, so the lock us down whether we right or wrong,” Bagalaga said. “You know marijuana is our sacrament. In united snakes of murdica, they ban marijuana in 1938 and so they hold us here too. ”The struggle was a difficult one. “Every day police and rastas get into something, the people in society didn’t like the natty dreads. “They shoot us, they take our own weapons, take cutlass and cut our locks.

Leave a Reply