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Police seize 15 homes, $10M in marijuana

Codiac RCMP nab 5,000 'high end' plants from high-end neighbourhoods

July 28/2004
ROD ALLEN
Times & Transcript Staff

In ritzy Royal Oaks Estates the houses are "high-end,' and so is the marijuana, say the RCMP.

Thirteen suspects whom police described only as "being of Vietnamese descent" are expected to appear in Moncton provincial court today on charges connected to a months-long RCMP investigation that climaxed in dramatic fashion yesterday.

Police seized more than 5,000 plants of "high-end marijuana," said RCMP "J' Division media relations officer Sgt. Gary Cameron, meaning expensive, highly concentrated pot destined for markets outside the province with a potential "street value' exceeding $10 million.

All told, yesterday's noon-hour raid swooped down on 15 homes in the metropolitan area.

One, at 16 Fraser St. in Moncton, is described as "the nest," where marijuana "farmers' - apparently also sophisticated technicians adept at stealing electricity and concealing their multi-million-dollar crimes - slept and ate between rounds of cultivating basement plots in the other 14 scattered widely over the city and its fringes.



Perhaps surprisingly to many citizens, four of those homes are in Royal Oaks Estates on the northern outskirts of the city, where a luxury golf course and state-of-the-art amenities compete for attention with some of the most expensive homes in metro.

But not everyone is entirely surprised, according to Royal Oaks resident Mike Arsenault, who lives next door to No. 54 Kervin Cr.

Arsenault's mysterious "neighbours' occupied a $300,000 luxury home with glowing hardwood floors, expansive windows, a lovely kitchen area and 1,000 pot plants in the basement.

They were growing under a canopy of 50 enormous, 400-watt 'grow-bulbs' - like 50 miniature suns that police estimate would consume about $500 worth of electricity in a single month.

"We all thought something very strange was going on there," says Arsenault of the people he believes bought the house about a year ago.

No one knew for sure exactly when, because they kept such a low profile, but there was enough strangeness about them - all

people who appeared to be in their 20s or 30s and all of Asian extraction that they were at times the talk of the neighbourhood.

"Everybody said the same thing; that there's something very, very weird about it with all the coming and going, a bunch of young guys, blinds closed all the time, year-round. I'd be out blowing snow in the winter and you'd wave and they'd just look straight ahead like they had blinders on."

There were other clues, added Arsenault two large ventilators are installed on the roof at the back, facing the golf course's No. 6 hole, and a huge Lennox heat exchanger on the side of the house facing his looks to be twice the size that would be required for a home that size.

No one thought to call the police.

"Nobody likes to get involved in someone else's affairs," said Arsenault, although it's possible someone eventually did through the crimestoppers number. He noted that an RCMP officer moved into the neighbourhood a couple of doors down just three weeks ago.

In any event Arsenault was at a relative's house yesterday when his daughter called to say there were "a bunch of guys in white suits running around outside" and obviously, something was up.

To see all the police there yesterday and to finally have it brought home what was going on was "pretty scary."

You could understand how suspicion would not give way to alarm, given the neighbourhood.

As police gave journalists a tour of No. 54 Kervin yesterday, a foursome was cheerfully sinking their putts at Hole No. 6 separated from the house by no more than a hundred feet - paved bicycle path, a sandtrap and the green. Police and reporters were invisible and the golfers had no clue what was going on.

Officers inside the home told reporters the occupants had cut a hole right through the concrete foundation, located the underground power cable and hooked their own transformer to it so they could rob NB Power to run their grow lights.

Power theft is, in fact, hard to detect, said Eugene Giroux, NB Power's manager of operations for eastern New Brunswick.

The cops called Giroux in to cut the power before they moved in, given the enormous amount of electricity in use, the potential for short-outs in homemade circuitry and the vats of potentially volatile fertilizer and other chemicals in the home.

"We have instruments that will measure the amount of electricity being diverted, but unless we get a tip we won't know to use the instruments."

A certain amount of power is lost from the system throughout the year for various reasons and can't be pinpointed to individual thieves until someone alerts the authorities, he said.

Cameron said the majority of the houses seized by police in yesterday's raid are at the high end of the scale. Use of high-end homes for marijuana cultivation is relatively new here but there are sound reasons for using them, said the veteran officer

"People just don't think anything wrong would be going on in homes like these. But they clearly show what kind of money these people have available to them."

Sgt. Rick Daigle of 'J' Division's commercial crimes section said the 15 homes have been officially seized and are in RCMP hands, likely until judicial process is completed in the case. Whether or not all 13 arrested yesterday are convicted, the homes were clearly being used for illegal purposes and they will likely be forfeited to the Crown, the proceeds turned back to government.

Today's scheduled appearances are for 13 suspects - 12 male and one female.

Where they come from has not been disclosed and at this point may not even be known, although federal immigration authorities and police in Hamilton, Ont., are assisting in the investigation, Cameron said.

Link
 
7 charged with selling methadone

7 charged with selling methadone

By STEVE LIEBERMAN
THE JOURNAL NEWS
(Original publication: July 28, 2004)


Seven Rockland residents were indicted yesterday on felony drug charges involving the sale of liquid methadone acquired from the county health complex drug clinic in Ramapo, prosecutors said.

The grand jury indictment unsealed yesterday in County Court resulted from a yearlong investigation into the sale of liquid methadone and other drugs, including cocaine, inside the clinic and outside in the parking lot, the Rockland District Attorney's Office said.

The Rockland Narcotics Task Force conducted the investigation, using undercover investigators to participate in the purchases of the drugs and witness the sales. The drug sales cited by prosecutors were committed during a seven-month period from April 18, 2003, to yesterday.

Methadone has been given to people to treat narcotics withdrawal and addiction for at least three decades. It is a synthetic narcotic, given out in pill or liquid form, usually to ease a person's withdrawal from heroin.

The investigation led to the arrests of Arnold Lee Vandunk, 54, of West Haverstraw, Iris Appel, 54, of Monsey; Rose Dennison, 42, of Haverstraw, Craig Campbell, 24, of Nanuet, John O'Brien, 46, of Congers, Anthony Teti, 54, of Garnerville, and Hector Santos, 64, of Monsey, Senior Assistant District Beth Finkelstein said yesterday.

All seven pleaded not guilty during their arraignments yesterday in County Court before either Judge Kenneth Resnik or William Kelly.

The county clinic and its personnel were not involved in the drug sales, Finkelstein said.

Narcotics Task Force Director Joseph Tripodo said the undercover agency was called into the case by the Rockland Sheriff's Department last November when officers believed methadone was being sold by the drug clinic's clients.

The task force sent investigators, mostly on Saturday mornings, when the methadone clinic clients received a double dose of the drug. The clinic was closed on Sundays.

"They would dump a portion of the methadone they received from the clinic into bottles used by the undercovers," Tripodo said, "and charge our undercovers anywhere between $40 and $60."

Tripodo said investigators used their own medicinal bottles because the clients had to return their bottles to the clinic to show that the methadone was used.

Vandunk is accused of selling liquid methadone on three occasions for $40 each time. He was accused of selling methadone on Dec. 13, Dec. 20 and Jan. 24 at the health complex. He was charged with three counts each of possessing and selling drugs.

Appel was accused of selling liquid methadone three times for $50 each time on Dec. 20, Jan. 10 and Jan. 24.

Dennison was accused of selling liquid methadone for $60 each time on Dec. 2 and Feb. 7, as well as accused of selling cocaine for $20 to an undercover task force officer.

Campbell was accused of selling four Alprazolam pills for $20 to an undercover officer on April 18, 2003, as well as methadone for $40 each time on Dec. 20 and Dec. 24. Alprazolem is an antidepressant.

The grand jury indictment accuses O'Brien of selling methadone for $40 on Dec. 20.

Teti was accused of selling liquid methadone for $40 on Dec. 20, for $30 on Dec. 24 and Jan. 10, and for $50 on Feb. 7.

Santos was charged in the indictment with selling liquid methadone for $40 on Jan. 10 and for $50 on Feb. 21.

The investigation is continuing, authorities said.

Link
 
Father accused of providing fatal overdose

Father accused of providing fatal overdose

Vancouver police arrest Michael W. Proudfoot, saying he gave his daughter, 21, the methadone that killed her in June

Wednesday, July 28, 2004
HOLLEY GILBERT

VANCOUVER -- The father of a Vancouver woman who died of an overdose of methadone has been accused of killing her by providing the drug.

Michael W. Proudfoot, 49, was working on a jail road crew as part of a sentence for an earlier conviction when he was arrested Tuesday in the death of Melissa Proudfoot-Chancellor, 21.

He is being held in the Clark County Jail and will make his first appearance today on an accusation of controlled substance homicide/domestic violence. Proudfoot-Chancellor's death is considered an act of domestic violence because she and the suspect were related.

Arrests for controlled substance homicide are rare.

"Unfortunately, detection of the source of drugs is something usually not done because the trail to the source is never really clear, so a person often goes unprosecuted," said Detective Stuart D. Hemstock of the Vancouver Police Department.

Proudfoot-Chancellor was found dead June 11 in the St. Louis Way home she shared with her 5-year-old daughter and her former husband, Hemstock said. Dennis Wickham, Clark County medical examiner, determined methadone overdose as the cause of death.

Police think Proudfoot supplied his daughter with the methadone "free of charge" several days before her death, said Hemstock, who declined to provide details of the investigation.

"The father was grief-stricken and guilt-ridden," the detective said. "He appeared to be very sorry for any possible responsibility he may have had in his daughter's death."

Hemstock said the fatal dose was not the first time Proudfoot-Chancellor had used methadone.

In a liquid form, the drug is best known as a legal substitute that heroin addicts use to kick their habits. Methadone is prescribed in a pill form as a strong, long-lasting pain reliever.

Detectives think Proudfoot-Chancellor ingested methadone pills her father obtained from an illegal source, Hemstock said. Proudfoot declined to identify the source of the drug to police, Hemstock said.

Link
 
Alleged drug don gets $129-Million tax bill

Alleged drug don gets $129-m tax bill

Bailiffs clean out Anton Johnson's Norbrook home

ERICA VIRTUE, Observer writer
Thursday, July 29, 2004

GOVERNMENT tax investigators confirmed yesterday that they seized more than $2.5-million worth of furnishings from the swanky Norbrook Road townhouse home of Anton Johnson, who the police allege is a drug kingpin and the pilot of a Piper Navajo aircraft that was involved in a dramatic cocaine smuggling operation at the Tinson Pen aerodrome a year ago.

The raid took place last Thursday when agents of the finance ministry's Financial Investigation Division (FID) and the narcotics police went to Johnson's home at Glen Abbey Court, 13A Norbrook Road to collect on a tax claim of more than $100 million.

"I can confirm the raid and seizure," head of the FID, Mike Surridge told the Observer. "I can tell you that it was done under the Tax Collection Act, and in conjunction with the narcotics police."

"The warrant authorised the bailiff to distrain and dispose of goods and chattels, owned by, or in possession of a person who fails to comply with his or her tax obligation," Surridge said.

Surridge declined to disclose the sum for which Johnson, a Bahamian, was assessed, but other officials close to the case said that Inland Revenue Department demanded $129 million from Johnson.

The agency made the assessment, informed sources said, after Johnson failed to respond to the Commissioner of Inland Revenue about his income and wealth relative to his tax returns.

Johnson was among nine persons, including two policemen, allegedly involved in the Tinson Pen incident on July 13 last year, when narcotics police tried to intercept a plane that they claimed was allegedly being loaded with cocaine.

In what critics suggested was a bungled operation by the police, shots were exchanged between the police and the alleged drug smugglers. The plane was punctured but was able to take off. However, all the men involved in its loading managed to escape.

But five hours later the plane returned to Tinson Pen and it was later seized by the police. Johnson was arrested three days later at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Montego Bay.

In a decision in January that angered the head of the narcotics police, Carl Williams, a Kingston magistrate freed all the alleged cocaine smugglers on technicalities.

Prosecutors did not properly outline the case before serving indictments against them and their case was also undermined by the lack of a forensic certificate that a banned substance was being trafficked.

Neither were there statements from independent persons that a drug operation was being carried out, defence lawyers argued.

"This is a victory for the drug-trafficking community," Williams told the Observer after the verdict.

Johnson, however, still has a part-heard case for allegedly flying a plane without the requisite airworthiness certificate.

But the authorities have apparently decided to move after Johnson on the tax front - a development that could well mushroom in the face of the government's declared war on alleged drug traffickers.

In recent months, the police have arrested several persons who the authorities say are leading drug dealers, including one who was on US President George W Bush's list of drug kingpins.

However, the authorities have not specifically said that
Johnson's tax assessment was based on his alleged drug wealth, although Surridge's confirmation of last week's raid seems to make that connection.

"In Johnson's case, the assessment was served, and he had 30 days to respond," Surridge said. "His failure to do so led to tax officials securing a distress warrant which was executed by a bailiff on July 22."

According to Observer sources, the bailiffs who turned up at Johnson's home took everything, including cooking utensils and his clothes iron.

He begged that they leave a mattress on which he could sleep.

Tom Tavares-Finson, the lawyer who represented Johnson in the drug case, said he has advised his client to seek counsel who could adequately represent him in the tax case. Tax law was outside his area of expertise, Tavares-Finson said.

"When he (Johnson) called me and told me that he had received this tax assessment notification, he thought it was a joke, so he did not respond to it," Tavares-Finson said.
According to the lawyer, Johnson is in the process of seeking counsel on the matter.

Tavares-Finson, however, questioned the legality of the search, specifically the involvement of the narcotics police.

"I don't know the law on this matter, but it seems to me that the narcotics police had no right to be involved in a matter which is said to be a tax assessment," he said.

Link
 
Agawam raid nets marijuana haul

Agawam raid nets marijuana haul

Agawam raid nets marijuana haul
Thursday, July 29, 2004
By KEN ROSS
[email protected]

AGAWAM - An estimated $50,000 worth of marijuana plants were seized Tuesday by police as a result of an aerial search. Twenty-six marijuana plants were seized at 65 Central St., according to Sgt. Mark T. Pfau. Police also arrested two residents living at the same address: Nicole Johnson, 36, and Timothy Fuller, 49.

Johnson and Fuller were each charged with manufacturing and cultivating marijuana, Pfau said. Both were released on bail around 6 p.m. Tuesday.

Yesterday, Johnson and Fuller were arraigned at Westfield District Court. Both pleaded innocent, according to the court clerk's office.

After yesterday's arraignment, Johnson was released on personal recognizance. Fuller was released on $200 bail, the court clerk said.

Fuller and Johnson will return to court Sept. 14 for a pre-trial hearing, the court clerk said.

Tuesday's drug raid was conducted by Agawam police in cooperation with the Eastern Hampden County Narcotics Task Force and the Air National Guard, Pfau said.

Helicopters were used to locate the marijuana plants, Pfau said. The plants ranged in height from 2 to 10 feet, Pfau said. If all 26 plants grew to full maturity, Pfau said the crop would have a street value of approximately $45,000 to $50,000.

Similar seizures have taken place locally this month. On July 21, authorities seized 25 marijuana plants found growing beside the Connecticut River in Holyoke.

Link
 
Hip-hop mogul's wife busted for pot

Thursday, July 29

Hip-hop mogul's wife busted for pot

(CNN) -- The wife of hip-hop entrepreneur Russell Simmons has been charged with possessing marijuana and avoiding police, according to law enforcement officials.

Kimora Lee Simmons, the 29-year-old model and designer of the fashion label Baby Phat, was driving home in Saddle River, New Jersey, Monday when police officers attempted to stop her car "for minor motor vehicle violations," Lt. Robert Breese of the Saddle River Police Department told CNN.

Simmons "didn't slow down or stop for police who had their lights and sirens on and used their public announcement system to ask her to pull over," Breese said.

Police arrested Simmons after she eventually stopped outside her house. Officers discovered "a small amount of marijuana" in her car, according to Breese.

She was released after being charged with possession of marijuana under 50 grams, eluding police, careless driving, tailgating and driving with a broken brake light.

Russell Simmons, the founder and co-owner of the Def Jam record label, said, "My wife is an excellent driver, and she's not guilty of any crime."

"You don't have to grab my wife and put handcuffs on her, her wrists are all bruised up," he said.

Simmons, 46, has vigorously campaigned to repeal New York State's Rockefeller Drug laws, which require long prison sentences for people caught possessing or selling relatively small amounts of drugs.

"The Rockefeller Drug Laws are unfair, unjust and un-American, and that's why Governor (George) Pataki should repeal these unfair laws now," Simmons said in 2003.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/SHOWBIZ/Music/07/29/simmons.arrest/index.html
 
Australia, Sydney: 200 police in Redfern raid

200 police in Redfern drugs raid
July 30, 2004 - 12:44PM
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/07/30/1091080421684.html?oneclick=true

Hundreds of NSW Police today raided houses in Sydney's notorious suburb of Redfern, arresting dozens of suspected drug dealers.

The operation, which had been planned for months, involved officers from the NSW Drugs Squad, Redfern local area command and PolAir, police said.

Scores of undercover police spent the morning identifying suspected drug dealers in the Block area, where according to evidence to a parliamentary inquiry the heroin trade is worth up to $50 million a year.

More than 200 police raided houses along two streets in the area shortly before 11am (AEST), police said.

AAP
 
Border Patrol seizes 1,650 pounds of marijuana

Border Patrol seizes 1,650 pounds of marijuana

Associated Press
Jul. 30, 2004

TUCSON - U.S. Border Patrol agents seized 1,650 pounds of marijuana and recovered two stolen trucks from the Tohono O'odham Indian Reservation.

The two trucks were concealed in brown camouflage tarps with holes cut out for the windshields and strapped to the truck bodies with Velcro, the Border Patrol said Thursday.

The trucks were found stuck in the mud and presumably abandoned Wednesday afternoon.

The marijuana was wrapped in bundles in the beds of the trucks and had an estimated street value of $1.24 million, authorities said.

Link
 
City man charged in cars-for-drugs scam
The Register Citizen
July 31, 2004

BRISTOL -- A Torrington man who took cars from his Bristol employer’s lot and "rented" them out in exchange for drugs and cash was sentenced to two years in prison Thursday in Bristol Superior Court.

William Charles Sweeney, 38, pleaded guilty under the Alford doctrine to first-degree larceny. Pleading under the Alford doctrines means a defendant acknowledges the state has enough evidence to likely secure a conviction in a trial, but does not admit guilt.

Sweeney was charged in December for allegedly giving a false name to get hired at Stephen’s World of Wheels as a sales representative and loaning out cars that were for sale or had been turned in to the business at the end of a lease.

Members of the Connecticut Regional Auto Theft Task Force first became aware of the illegal rentals when the Waterbury Police Department spotted an unreported stolen car in the city. The vehicle’s occupants were arrested and gave information about where they got the car.

According to a warrant for his arrest, Sweeney rented out high-end vehicles -- including Cadillacs, Chevrolet Tahoes and Dodge Durangos -- a dozen times. The average price for renting a Cadillac for a week was seven grams of cocaine and $300 cash, police wrote in the warrant.

Police said Stephen’s employees were unaware of the scam until investigators contacted them about a recovered vehicle. A check of the vehicles on the lot found one with 900 additional miles on it and champagne wrappers and marijuana in the back.

Sweeney, who is currently serving a two-year prison sentence for cases out of other courts, was sentenced by Judge Mark H. Taylor Thursday to serve two years concurrent to his present sentence.

Link
 
Re: story posted above about Russell Simmons' wife getting busted .... here's her mug shot -- too funny!

vert.kimora.lee.jpg
 
There's a lesson to learn from this -- DON'T send drugs thru the mail!

Woman charged with getting pot through U.S. mail
By Lisa Marchesoni / DNJ Staff writer
August 1, 2004

Murfreesboro Police intercepted a large round brick of marijuana valued between $5,000 to $10,000 before it was delivered to a woman waiting for its arrival Monday, an officer said.

Officer Jacoby O'Gwynn chraged suspect Unica Kyle, 20, of xxxxx at xxx xxxxx xx with possession of marijuana for resale and criminal impersonation.

Kyle was charged while waiting for the U.S. Postal Service to deliver the marijuana at Tremont Apartments on Tremont Drive, O'Gwynn said.

The investigation began when police received a call Monday about two women driving around the apartment parking lot. O'Gwynn located Kyle who was accompanied by another woman.

Kyle, who identified herself with a different name, told O'Gwynn she awaiting a package a friend sent to the wrong address. The officer asked for consent to search her vehicle which she granted.

O'Gwynn found her driver's license that gave Kyle's correct name. A check through the National Crime Information Center showed she was wanted in Illinois for possession of a controlled substance.

She was taken into custody where she was interviewed by Vice Detective Shawn Jensen.

"Kyle stated she was there to pick up the marijuana," O'Gwynn said. "She's not releasing who she's picking it up for."

Sgt. Gerald Rowland, Officers Chad Hershman and Anthony Whitehead backed up O'Gwynn.

O'Gwynn waited about three hours until the mail carrier arrived. She had a package addressed to an apartment that didn't exist.

K-9 Officer Matt Lovejoy and his dog, Murph, checked several packages. Murph indicated the package addressed to the apartment that didn't exist might contain drugs.

The package was addressed to Roberto Ramirez of Tremont Drive. O'Gwynn checked with the apartment manager who reported no one with his name lived at the apartments.

O'Gwynn checked with police in El Paso, Texas, where the 34-pound package originated. The name and address of the sender were bogus.

Police notified a federal postal inspector who obtained a search warrant to open the package Tuesday. O'Gwynn opened the package at the police department and found a large container wrapped in cellophane.

The large brick of marijuana was found inside the container. A large bag of kitty litter was found inside the package as well. The kitty litter was believed added to disguise the smell of the marijuana.

O'Gwynn charged Kyle. She was booked into Rutherford County Adult Detention Center. She is being held on $100,000 bond. A hearing is set Aug. 3 in General Sessions Court.

Link
 
AU: Woman to face marijuana driving charge

Woman to face marijuana driving charge

Monday, 2 August 2004

A woman has been charged with driving under the influence of marijuana after being stopped for a random breath test on Saturday morning.

The 37-year-old was stopped in Patton Street, Broken Hill and taken to the hospital so samples could be taken after marijuana was allegedly found in her handbag.

She has also been charged with smoking and possessing the drug and having property suspected of being stolen.

Police allege credit cards and a licence in other names were found in her handbag.

She has also been charged with driving an unregistered and uninsured car, but she passed the breath test.

Meanwhile, a 40-year-old man released from the Broken Hill jail on Thursday is back inside again.

He was in custody for breaching bail on an assault charge and was arrested again at the jail for possessing marijuana allegedly found in a sock while he was being searched prior to release.

His bail was continued and he was required to return to Wilcannia, but police say he was seen in town at the weekend and he was arrested for breaching his bail and remanded in custody until today.

Police say it is the 28th time he has been charged with breaching bail.

Link
 
Ecstasy Lab Bust in South Dakota

Has anyone heard anything about this.......
SIOUX FALLS DISTRICT
April 27th:

Troopers Koltz and Whisler assisted the DEA in Marion with the seizure of the first known ecstasy lab in South Dakota. Seven subjects were arrested. Kaz indicated to three vehicles on the property. Found in the seizure were the laboratory, marijuana, hallucinogenic mushrooms and a substance that tested positive of Ecstasy. Trooper Whisler transported the three males that were arrested to the Minnehaha County Jail.

Link: http://hp.state.sd.us/back/050104.htm

[edit: fixed format]
 
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Teenage dealer busted; cops tipped off by shirt that said "I am a dealer"

Drug pusher under a vest
By ALASTAIR TAYLOR, The Sun (UK)
August 2, 2004

COPS swooped on a teenage drug peddler's home and found the dimwit wearing a T-shirt that read: "I am a dealer."

And when they searched his bedroom the officers found £18,000-worth of crack, cocaine and heroin hidden away.

Mohammed Rahman, 19, claimed he had stashed the drugs for safe keeping for other dealers.

But he has now started a 30-month jail sentence after admitting three charges of possessing class A drugs with intent to supply.

Detectives launched the raid on Rahman's family home in Keighley, West Yorks, after a tip-off.

A cop said: "The team that carried out the raid could not believe it when they saw what he was wearing. Talk about stupidity!

"He had thousands of pounds worth of drugs in his bedroom and was happily wearing a T-shirt telling the whole world he was a dealer.

"I suppose he thought it was a joke."

Jobless Rahman was jailed last week, after a trial at Bradford Crown Court.

Link
 
Re: Teenage dealer busted; cops tipped off by shirt that said "I am a dealer"

fruitfly said:
[Jobless Rahman was jailed last week

What do you mean jobless ? He was slef emlpoyed as a DEALER !

It said so right on his shirt.

=D
 
Ecstasy Lab Bust in South Dakota

Has anyone heard anything about this.......

SIOUX FALLS DISTRICT

April 27th:

Troopers Koltz and Whisler assisted the DEA in Marion with the seizure of the first known ecstasy lab in South Dakota. Seven subjects were arrested. Kaz indicated to three vehicles on the property. Found in the seizure were the laboratory, marijuana, hallucinogenic mushrooms and a substance that tested positive of Ecstasy. Trooper Whisler transported the three males that were arrested to the Minnehaha County Jail.

http://hp.state.sd.us/back/050104.htm
 
It's about time some Americans took advantage of our nation's vast wilderness areas (i'm assuming this is in the middle of nowhere).. maybe we'll be able to pay $5 a pill if more of these labs sprung up
 
Why haven't the Mexicans done anything about this? I'm sure they can make truckloads of the stuff and flood the southwest.
 
117 drug-related arrests at fest

Posted on Mon, Mar. 08, 2004

Police arrest scores of dance-music fans at the Ultra Music Festival in downtown Miami and seize $25,000 in illegal drugs.

BY SUSAN ANASAGASTI


Undercover officers watching the sixth annual Ultra Music Festival on Saturday arrested more than 100 people suspected of dealing or using illegal drugs.

Officers of the Miami Police Department's Crime Suppression Unit and Special Investigations Section, Miami Beach Police and the Drug Enforcement Administration were moving among the 35,000 dance music aficionados who packed Bayfront Park in downtown Miami as part of Operation Difference.

Police arrested 117 partyers while seizing cocaine, Ecstasy, marijuana, crystal methamphetamine and LSD with a total street value of about $25,000.

''Our main thing was to get the drugs out of there,'' Lt. David Magnusson said. ``Everything was right there on the surface. We didn't have to go digging up for anything.''

Kicking off this year's Winter Music Conference, revelers moved to the progressive house and trance beats of Paul Oakenfold, Chemical Brothers and Paul van Dyk, among others.

But the spinning sounds mixed with drug use and summer-like temperatures made for a deadly combination, police said.

''Our main job was to stop the drug-selling but we were out there as parents as well,'' Lt. Rene Landa said. ''We wanted to make sure, too, that they were taken care of. It was scary out there.'' The arrests didn't stop the thousands of glowstick-waving music fans who swayed their sweaty bodies to the pulsating drum beats of the DJs.

''Everywhere you turned there was perpetual motion that would elevate the body temperature even if you were on nothing but water,'' Magnusson said. ``It's a recipe for disaster on your body.''

Fire-rescue workers treated about 30 drug users at the event; four were transported to the hospital, police said.

Last year, Miami Mayor Manny Diaz threatened to shut down the festival fearing pervasive drug use on city property.

But Landa said Ultra promoters were committed to keeping the festival safe.

''They worked hand-in-hand with the police department to ensure that the venue was a safe environment for all who attended,'' Landa said. ``We want to make sure drugs aren't coming into the city. Lord knows how many lives we saved by making the arrests and by being there.''

linky
 
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