Three arrests were made last week after a Barrow County Sheriff’s deputy stopped a driver for a traffic violation, and after searching the car, discovered firearms, methamphetamines and tools used for distributing the drugs, located in a backpack in the trunk.
Misty Dawn Milligan, 23, of Statham, April Poore, 21, of Winder, and Eric Rockmore, 31, of Bethlehem, were charged with possession of methamphetamine, possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute, possession of marijuana less than one ounce, possession of a drug related object and possession of a firearm or knife during commission of or attempt to commit certain felonies. Milligan was also charged with failure to maintain lane.
According to an incident report, BCSO Deputy David Kimball pulled over the driver of a 1998 Chevy Cavalier at the intersection of Manning Gin Road and Tia Drive in Bethlehem at about 12:30 a.m. on Sept. 22 after watching the car weave into oncoming traffic.
After assisting an assisting deputy witnessed Poore try to hide something under her leg, he asked for consent to search the vehicle. Milligan refused and Auburn K9 Police Officer Cpl. Tony Lafreniere assigned with the Barrow County Crime Task Force was called to assist. The deputies detained the occupants until the K9 arrived and gave a positive alert for the vehicle, the report states.
Found inside the trunk inside a black back pack were a 9-mm semi-automatic firearm, two 30 round 9-mm magazines, a box of Winchester 9-mm ammo, a blue bandana, a white ring with several white stones and a multi-function army knife. The backpack also contained a bag of marijuana and more drug-related paraphernalia, including a spoon and a digital scale that had residue on them.
The suspects argued about whom the items in the bag belonged to, wrote Kimball. After arguing about who owned the bag and it’s contents, all three suspects were placed under arrest and taken to the Barrow County Detention Center.
Recent BCSO arrests Sept. 19-25
The following people also are or were being held at the BCDC. Listed below are their names, ages, addresses and the charges for their arrests by the Barrow County Sheriff’s Office.
An arrest occurs when an officer has probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed or if a person commits a crime in an officer’s presence. An arrest is not a conviction of guilt.
The following names were provided by a jail media report distributed by the Barrow County Sheriff’s Office:
•Kayla Marie Atherton, 18, of 1939 Diamond Ridge Drive, Statham; weekender serving 10th of 10th weekend.
•Kaylyn McCully Arnold, 51, of 62 Apalachee Church Road, Auburn; battery against a person who is 65 years or older.
•Russell Caleb Bales, 19, of 665 Washington Road, Lexington; speeding in excess of maximum limits, marijuana possession less than one ounce.
•Tequila Marcia Batton, 34, of 100 Rolling Ridge Drive Lot 417, Athens; felony probation violation.
•Phillip Wendall Boss, 54, of 204 Deerwalk Drive, Winder; felony probation violation.
•Teresa Christine Burns, 52, of 120 Mears St., Winder; simple battery family violence, simple assault family violence.
•Teresa Ann Coleman, 43, of 481 Lebanon Church Road, Jefferson; failure to appear misdemeanor.
•Wendy Dawn Craig, 38, of 3720 Arden Creek Court, Bethlehem; DUI-alcohol, failure to maintain lane.
•Emory Mason Dean, 21, of 4380 Mars Hill Road, Bogart; here for court only.
•William Dale Dodd, 29, of 590 Round Table Road, Athens; felony theft by taking.
•Toby Lige Dutton, 33, of 213 Bellview St., Winder; driving while license suspended or revoked.
•Richard Lee Fancil, 30, of 458 Old Milton Road, Mayesville; hold for Banks County.
•Melody Jean Garcia, 30, of 6496 Frank Reeder Road, Pensacola, Fla.; misdemeanor failure to appear.
•Stacey LeWayne Griffin, 46, of 3182 Gillesville Drive, Bethlehem; marijuana possession less than one ounce, possession and use of drug related objects, failure to signal lane change or turn.
•Dwayne Edward Hill, 50, of 294 Tanners Bridge Road, Winder; court sentence.
•Katie Lynn Hall, 22, of 175 Southside Mobile Home Park, Monroe; simple battery family violence, criminal trespass.
•Brandon Ray Hogsed, 29, of 4907 Velva Way, Winder; driver while license withdrawn, failure to maintain insurance, removing or affixing license plate with intent to conceal or misrepresent.
•Billie Renee Higginbotham, 34, of 146 Pine St. Apt. C-203, Jefferson; weekender serving 2 of 3.
•Alan Steve Hyde, 55, of 190 Mulberry Road, Winder; DUI-alcohol, failure to maintain lane.
•Charles Edward Jackson, 31, of 282 Apperson Drive Apt. 6, Winder; serving 5 of 15 weekends.
•Sara Kathleen Layton, 20, of 1808 Madrid Falls Drive, Braselton; felony probation violation.
•Jacqueline Mary Levita, 66, of 88 West Athens St., Winderl misdemeanor theft by shoplifting.
•Michael Danarde Lyles, 30, of 118 Griffith St., Winder.
•Frederick Clinton Libbey, 23, of 942 Grier Road, Winder; weekender.
•Tanner Joe Maloch, 30, of 152 Walnut Road, Hoschton; simple battery family violence, two counts felony theft by receiving stolen property, felony theft buy receiving property stolen in another state, seat belt violation, driving while license withdrawn.
•Sridhar Marta, 38, of 180 West Spring St., Atlanta; hold for court.
•Devin Tyrie Moon, 19, of 113 North Williams St., Winder; burglary.
•Steven Orr, 54, of 4859 Windwalker Drive, Flowery Branch; DUI-alcohol, headlight requirements.
•Kevin Russell Morgan, 42, of f42 Lee St. Apt. 5, Winder; criminal trespass, hit and run, duty of driver to stop at or return to scene of accident.
•Michael Elijah Murphy, 25, of 897 Honey Creek Road, Winder; serving one weekend.
•Travis Farrell Norton, 31, of 130 Ashwood Court, Winder; weekender, serving 1st of 3rd.
•Melissa Ann Phillips, 37, of 2608 North West 58th Avenue Apt. B, Jennings, Fla.; felony probation violation.
•Benjamin David Reynolds, 37, of 187 South Broad St., Winder; terroristic threats and acts.
•Adrian LaTrese Rhodes, 29, of 514 Fort St., Winder; serve 14 days Drug Court.
•Sarah Katelyn Riscalla, 19, of 545 Rosewood Circle, Winder; simple battery family violence.
•Tareyton Sharez Robinson, 21, of 491 Tanners Bridge Circle, Bethlehem; felony probation violation.
•Kelly Danielle Rogersdean, 41, of 379 Sunset Drive Apt. 3, Statham; harassing phone calls.
•Leonidas Burton Sears IV, 23, of 1270 Lamont Circle, Dacula; serve three days.
•Billy Wayne Scandera, 25, of 213 Booth Road, Statham; criminal trespass.
•Thomas Wayne Shelton, 43, of 2629 Honors Court, Buford felony probation violation.
•Scott Swanson Short, 42, of 187 Broad St. Apt. B-4, Winder; battery family violence.
•Brandi Louise Skinner, 27, of 856 Than Skinner Road, Winder; misdemeanor probation violation, felony probation violation.
•Kendarious Deon Smith, 22, of 268 Griffith St., Winder; possession of Alprozolam, unlawful to possess, control, manufacture, deliver, distribute, dispense, administer, purchase or sell, illegal possession of controlled substance, speeding in excess of maximum limits, failure to have license on person.
•Zachary Ryan Smith, 33, of 3460 Forest Valley Way, Cumming; misdemeanor theft by receiving stolen property.
•Angela Joan Spraggs, 51, homeless; financial transaction card theft.
•Sharon Denise Vinson, 45, of 409 Happy Eagle Drive, Winder obstructing or hindering law enforcement officers, disorderly conduct.
•Stephen Lee Wagner, 58, of 406 Waters Edge Drive, Clarkesville; SUI-alcohol, failure to maintain lane.
•Tim Joseph Warren, 48, of 285 Clover Drive, Auburn; driving while license withdrawn.
•Tammy Patrice Williams, 47, of 109 Southland Drive, Warner Robins; misdemeanor failure to appear.
•Lorenzo Wise Jr., 33, of 280 Madison Blvd., Colbert; felony probation violation.
•Jerrold Westbrook, 45, of 6195 Mozart Drive, Riverdale; felony probation violation.
An arrest occurs when an officer has probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed or if a person commits a crime in an officer’s presence. An arrest is not a conviction of guilt.
The following names were provided by a jail media report distributed by the Barrow County Sheriff’s Office:
•Kayla Marie Atherton, 18, of 1939 Diamond Ridge Drive, Statham; weekender serving 10th of 10th weekend.
•Kaylyn McCully Arnold, 51, of 62 Apalachee Church Road, Auburn; battery against a person who is 65 years or older.
•Russell Caleb Bales, 19, of 665 Washington Road, Lexington; speeding in excess of maximum limits, marijuana possession less than one ounce.
•Tequila Marcia Batton, 34, of 100 Rolling Ridge Drive Lot 417, Athens; felony probation violation.
•Phillip Wendall Boss, 54, of 204 Deerwalk Drive, Winder; felony probation violation.
•Teresa Christine Burns, 52, of 120 Mears St., Winder; simple battery family violence, simple assault family violence.
•Teresa Ann Coleman, 43, of 481 Lebanon Church Road, Jefferson; failure to appear misdemeanor.
•Wendy Dawn Craig, 38, of 3720 Arden Creek Court, Bethlehem; DUI-alcohol, failure to maintain lane.
•Emory Mason Dean, 21, of 4380 Mars Hill Road, Bogart; here for court only.
•William Dale Dodd, 29, of 590 Round Table Road, Athens; felony theft by taking.
•Toby Lige Dutton, 33, of 213 Bellview St., Winder; driving while license suspended or revoked.
•Richard Lee Fancil, 30, of 458 Old Milton Road, Mayesville; hold for Banks County.
•Melody Jean Garcia, 30, of 6496 Frank Reeder Road, Pensacola, Fla.; misdemeanor failure to appear.
•Stacey LeWayne Griffin, 46, of 3182 Gillesville Drive, Bethlehem; marijuana possession less than one ounce, possession and use of drug related objects, failure to signal lane change or turn.
•Dwayne Edward Hill, 50, of 294 Tanners Bridge Road, Winder; court sentence.
•Katie Lynn Hall, 22, of 175 Southside Mobile Home Park, Monroe; simple battery family violence, criminal trespass.
•Brandon Ray Hogsed, 29, of 4907 Velva Way, Winder; driver while license withdrawn, failure to maintain insurance, removing or affixing license plate with intent to conceal or misrepresent.
•Billie Renee Higginbotham, 34, of 146 Pine St. Apt. C-203, Jefferson; weekender serving 2 of 3.
•Alan Steve Hyde, 55, of 190 Mulberry Road, Winder; DUI-alcohol, failure to maintain lane.
•Charles Edward Jackson, 31, of 282 Apperson Drive Apt. 6, Winder; serving 5 of 15 weekends.
•Sara Kathleen Layton, 20, of 1808 Madrid Falls Drive, Braselton; felony probation violation.
•Jacqueline Mary Levita, 66, of 88 West Athens St., Winderl misdemeanor theft by shoplifting.
•Michael Danarde Lyles, 30, of 118 Griffith St., Winder.
•Frederick Clinton Libbey, 23, of 942 Grier Road, Winder; weekender.
•Tanner Joe Maloch, 30, of 152 Walnut Road, Hoschton; simple battery family violence, two counts felony theft by receiving stolen property, felony theft buy receiving property stolen in another state, seat belt violation, driving while license withdrawn.
•Sridhar Marta, 38, of 180 West Spring St., Atlanta; hold for court.
•Devin Tyrie Moon, 19, of 113 North Williams St., Winder; burglary.
•Steven Orr, 54, of 4859 Windwalker Drive, Flowery Branch; DUI-alcohol, headlight requirements.
•Kevin Russell Morgan, 42, of f42 Lee St. Apt. 5, Winder; criminal trespass, hit and run, duty of driver to stop at or return to scene of accident.
•Michael Elijah Murphy, 25, of 897 Honey Creek Road, Winder; serving one weekend.
•Travis Farrell Norton, 31, of 130 Ashwood Court, Winder; weekender, serving 1st of 3rd.
•Melissa Ann Phillips, 37, of 2608 North West 58th Avenue Apt. B, Jennings, Fla.; felony probation violation.
•Benjamin David Reynolds, 37, of 187 South Broad St., Winder; terroristic threats and acts.
•Adrian LaTrese Rhodes, 29, of 514 Fort St., Winder; serve 14 days Drug Court.
•Sarah Katelyn Riscalla, 19, of 545 Rosewood Circle, Winder; simple battery family violence.
•Tareyton Sharez Robinson, 21, of 491 Tanners Bridge Circle, Bethlehem; felony probation violation.
•Kelly Danielle Rogersdean, 41, of 379 Sunset Drive Apt. 3, Statham; harassing phone calls.
•Leonidas Burton Sears IV, 23, of 1270 Lamont Circle, Dacula; serve three days.
•Billy Wayne Scandera, 25, of 213 Booth Road, Statham; criminal trespass.
•Thomas Wayne Shelton, 43, of 2629 Honors Court, Buford felony probation violation.
•Scott Swanson Short, 42, of 187 Broad St. Apt. B-4, Winder; battery family violence.
•Brandi Louise Skinner, 27, of 856 Than Skinner Road, Winder; misdemeanor probation violation, felony probation violation.
•Kendarious Deon Smith, 22, of 268 Griffith St., Winder; possession of Alprozolam, unlawful to possess, control, manufacture, deliver, distribute, dispense, administer, purchase or sell, illegal possession of controlled substance, speeding in excess of maximum limits, failure to have license on person.
•Zachary Ryan Smith, 33, of 3460 Forest Valley Way, Cumming; misdemeanor theft by receiving stolen property.
•Angela Joan Spraggs, 51, homeless; financial transaction card theft.
•Sharon Denise Vinson, 45, of 409 Happy Eagle Drive, Winder obstructing or hindering law enforcement officers, disorderly conduct.
•Stephen Lee Wagner, 58, of 406 Waters Edge Drive, Clarkesville; SUI-alcohol, failure to maintain lane.
•Tim Joseph Warren, 48, of 285 Clover Drive, Auburn; driving while license withdrawn.
•Tammy Patrice Williams, 47, of 109 Southland Drive, Warner Robins; misdemeanor failure to appear.
•Lorenzo Wise Jr., 33, of 280 Madison Blvd., Colbert; felony probation violation.
•Jerrold Westbrook, 45, of 6195 Mozart Drive, Riverdale; felony probation violation.


If i Were the driver i would for sure get a lawyer and not plead out this case if over ten minutes passed from start of stop to arrival of DRUG dog.
this would have fallen under violating unreasonable search and siezure
However, a seizure that is justified at its inception may become unreasonable if it is unreasonably prolonged in duration. Thus, if the sole reason for the stop is to issue a warning to the motorist, the stop becomes unreasonable if it is prolonged beyond the time reasonably necessary to issue the warning. And if a drug-sniffing dog is used during this unreasonable extension, the use of the dog violates the Fourth Amendment. The Supreme Court reasoned that using the dog changed the character of the encounter from a routine traffic stop to a drug investigation, and that transformation had to be supported by reasonable suspicion. The Supreme Court instead reasoned that the dog sniff does not change the character of an encounter unless the dog sniff invaded any of the citizen's other reasonable expectations of privacy. The Court concluded it did not.
so based on the news story first it was a traffic stop, the deputy noted driver may have hidden something under the leg, in the passenger compartment.
The court mentioned it should take ten minutes to write a citation further more in this case the news report also stated the issues in question were recovered from the trunk.
not the passenger compartment.
Canine Sniff During a Traffic Stop
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Lawyers.comsm
Before asking the question of whether police officers could lawfully have a police dog sniff your vehicle, you should ask whether the officers' stop of your vehicle was lawful.
A police officer may stop a vehicle if the officer has a reasonable suspicion to believe that a motorist is committing or has committed a traffic violation. An officer typically obtains reasonable suspicion for a traffic violation by personally watching the driver commit a violation.
A police officer may also stop a vehicle if the officer has a reasonable suspicion that a suspect is committing, is about to commit, or has committed a crime. For the stop to be legal, the officer must be able to state specific facts that support the suspicion.
What Police May Do During a Stop
Once police officers have lawfully stopped a car, either because of a civil traffic violation or because of a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, officers may do the following without any additional showings of suspicion or cause:
Order both the driver and passengers out of the car
Demand the driver's license, registration card and other relevant documents, such as an insurance card
Conduct a limited search to gain access to the vehicle identification number (VIN)
Conduct a dog sniff, so long as the sniff does not extend the length of the stop
To proceed beyond these acts, the officers must have cause or suspicion beyond the reason or suspicion that initially justified the stop.
During a lawful stop, officers may take actions reasonably related to the original reason for stopping the vehicle or related to suspicions that arise during the stop. For example:
To conduct a frisk, the officer must show not only a justification for the original stop, but also a reasonable suspicion that the suspect was armed and dangerous.
To justify a search of the vehicle, the stop must provide probable cause for the officers to believe it contains contraband
The officers may take some of the actions above automatically, but the officers will need more than the original justification for the stop to take other actions
An officer may stop a car for a traffic violation and then have a drug sniffing dog sniff the outside of the car for drugs. The officer does not need probable cause or even a reasonable suspicion that the car is engaged in dealing in illegal drugs (drug trafficking). For example, if the officer stops a motorist for speeding, the officer may cause a canine sniff for drugs to take place. However, bringing in the dog to sniff around the car cannot extend the length of the stop.
If the officer lacks a reasonable suspicion of drug trafficking and yet delays the traffic stop to wait for the arrival of the drug dog, the detention is illegal. The detention becomes illegal when it continues past the time needed to complete a lawful traffic stop. If drugs are seized in an illegal detention, the person charged with possession of the drugs can request that the drugs not be allowed as evidence at trial.
It makes sense to retain an attorney if a canine sniff revealed that there were drugs in your vehicle. Your attorney will present your defenses.
based on the news reports the whole reason beyond a traffic stop is shakey, some may say it could have been written by the Grimm Fairy tale company, certainly speculative since nothing in story mentions items found in passenger compartment.
After assisting an assisting deputy witnessed Poore try to hide something under her leg, he asked for consent to search the vehicle. Milligan refused and Auburn K9 Police Officer Cpl. Tony Lafreniere assigned with the Barrow County Crime Task Force was called to assist. The deputies detained the occupants until the K9 arrived
cleary says the suspect detained till K-9 arrived, clearly states search consent denied.
on what planet would you think a Judge and or jury would buy that one wasnt still detained even if it wasnt in the incident report, the fairy land of what imagination????
someone denies consent to search they dont hang around once told they can leave????? HELLO!!
Community college money wasnt spent well on selling ficton to the public I guess, cause only someone who wants to believe everyone belongs in jail would buy the scenario that once a suspect denies consent they stay and chit chat!!!!
So yes, trained "police animals" are higher than your rights in this case. The key words are however, trained and certified. The officer MUST provide documentation of the dogs reliability, training, certifications etc.
I could go into cases where due to handler rather then dogs giving false positives cases have been dismissed and overturned but you would rather point out how perfect locking ppl up is.
I live in this county and know how long it takes to drive from Auburn to Bethlehem. Maybe 15-20 minutes tops. Now take in to account that this was a police officer trying to get to a scene he was called to. Prob only took him about 7 to 10 minutes. This would not be considered a long detention at all.
By the way, show me where i pointed anything out about locking people up. You can't. Like I said before, you just want to take a bit of the topic and attack it, thus attempting to make yourself look educated on these topics.
TRY AGAIN
Deputies in august citing probable cause person sweating, thank goodness the Judge looked and said it was August wasnt it?
and the incident report mentioned the items in trunk not items found under or near leg area.
see it is easy to make up probable cause.
but Thank goodness the Judges here in Barrow county get more then quickie community college education.
even state patrol get 33 weeks of training not just thrown out there to make up probable cause statements that wont hold water to anyone looking at them with a grain of are you kidding, someone moving in car while waiting for ticket is not probable cause. someone dening consent to search is not probable cause.
someone consenting to a search then before anything is found and terminating the consent is not probable cause.
yes I could give consent to search upon search starting prior to officer locating anything I can terminate that consent. he must stop the search at that point, of course most likely he would not and thats when it is the lawyer who gets the fruit of the poison tree thrown out.
As far as where the rest of the items were found, how is this making up probable cause? A dog alert ANYWHERE on the vehicle gives the officer PC to search EVERYWHERE. Dogs alert on odor, odor travels through air, air then travels all over the car....get where I am going with this.....
One of the Judges for Barrow county goes to my Church and I know even though he went to party college he is straight arrow when it comes to the real probable cause and the fiction that is created after the arrest.
Now you really do not have an aurgument. she had it! got that! she had it. Let it go to court and she if they do not agree...she had it! go to something else for goodness sake
Good luck though, maybe you should get t shirts and stickers made, that may help your cause.
What really is interesting though is that you preach about your constitutional rights yet dislike the courts who uphold these rights. Not the 4th though, you don't like that one because it's not convenient to you.
Makes a lot of sense
first off the officer wrote the incident report AFTER contraband was found VIA Sniff, now had he conducted plain view and safety check prior to SNIFF call and arrival this case wouldnt pass the SMELL test.
Glad the Three Judges here in Barrow county at least two arent just rubber stamping cases where ppl plead not guilty
when a sworn peace officer has failed in sworn duty to uphold.
it disturbs me and yes that is one reason why we are in the mess we are in.
A peace officer is only an instrument on adhereance to those laws. If people would follow those and those of the Bible, your enemy and source of concern Law enforcement officers would not necessary.
SO there, the people breaking the law is the problem, not those trying to enforce it.
there [sic]
Your UGA diploma (if you actually have one), should be revoked. Of course, by UGA standards, you are a summa cum laude scholar.
If your wife did not receive her law degree via correspondence course, perhaps she might be qualified to administer some remedial English course. Of course, being damn cop, you don't need even that.
"Of course, being damn cop, you don't need even that"
Don't you mean " being A damn cop", or how about " you don't EVEN need that".
WOW!! are you really making mistakes while trying to correct someone else?
I bet your wife is proud. Sad enough that you chose to pick out the one mistake I made, but not even responding with a logical response to my post says enough about the person you are. All this tells me is that you do not have an argument and can only pick that little "there, their" out.
Grown folks are talking in here, go back to your coloring books.
and if you choose not to like comments here then of course dont read them.
one reason here to post and read comments is to learn things, sometimes our view may change, sometimes it may not.
even when people post items I disagree with I still encourage them to share those ideas, then again I believe in the Constituiton and not trying to control others so I guess that point is also made.
You have totally lost focus on the subject at hand with all the "sharing". You both have made some good points unfortunately they are lost in all the personal attacks
the problem seems to be State Police dont have a jail to fund so they dont feel pressure to impound and tow cars and place people in custody. for minor yes minor infractions, also they have less time to stop everyone who happens to be driving late at night and the only real reason they are stopped by locals is because it is late at night.
now if something happens to be found then of course the reason for the stop is documented as different then the reason when the contact first made.
example officer come to door, question where are you going?where are you coming from, both this is none of his business, if we live in free country where travel is to be free, that means a citizen shouldnt be asked let alone have to explain why they are on a road for any reason, and if the answer is I am lost that may be something one doesnt like to admit, so they say they are going whereever this is not cause to start a search.
however due to the over reaching and abuse Officer do this more often then is acceptable.
a free peole should not be forced to explian where they are going, where they have come from, or what they did or didnt do has long as it was not against the right of another citizen or property.
Trust me, nothing being said in here is taken personally, exspecially by someone sitting at home on the computer they got from Aarons rental and living off the unemployment check that we provide for you. As far as you two meeting, well most likely you dont have a car, nor money to put in the gas tank if you did, but if you want to meet then great,let him know what your visitation hours are at the jail house.
I am not worried if one has or doesnt have a gun be it Revolver or the dreaded AUTOMATIC, by the was either gns are Automatics or revolvers well in some cases single shot but those are limited to some shotguns muskets and Deringers so AUTOMATIC weapons arent the big evil the word used to make them appear as.
However, you are wrong (which figures) about the placement of "even." It was meant to modify "that," and not "need." This, obviously, is a concept that is way over your pointy head.
What a moron you are.
What was your major and GPA at UGA?
Does your shyster-wife secretly think you're a cretin?
by your logic the police should be able to drive by homes cars and search if they think there may be wrong doing, well I guess the reason we claim to have stopped Communist and Facist is pointless since if people violate the moral or the Goverment any means required to catch and punish them is ok.
how long till the sweat boxes come back to the Jail camps for the prisoners who sass the man behind the glasses after all they just convicts.
convicts deserve to be punished.
maybe it was good all the dead convicts found buried in Angola, the one deserved be punished, more then the court allowed after all they sassed the MAN.
PAPERS PLEASE.
they had a gun, in the trunk.
they had drugs in the trunk.
the inceident report only written after items found in trunk mentioned other deputy claimed to see driver trying to conceal something under the leg,
by the way I have a digital scale in my car, it is not contraband even though some police officers stop and search my car and take it, the Judge returns my legal property to me.
I dont have need to explian nor should I to Police or anyone else why I have anything in my car.
thank goodness Judges dont seize and allow wild searches of personal PRIVATE property like some officers feel should be more widespread uncurtailed.
after all we must stop the DRUGS.
unless of course they come in on USS ships in Port Elizabeth or the Port of Savanna with a nod and a wink. cause after all with out Govt help how would the drug war keep going???
NOBODY
CAN UNDERSTAND
YOUR CRAZY ONE WORD
HIT ENTER
ANOTHER WORD HIT ENTER ETC
HOW DO YOU EXPECT ANYONE TO LISTEN TO YOUR ARGUMENT OR LOGIC (LACK OF LOGIC)
WHEN YOU CAN'T EVEN USE
A COMPUTER.
Some people dont use drugs or any vice other then taking other rights and freedoms though force or threat thereof.
being a pot fiend that person probably just stays home very little crime with them other then drugs.
Most dope users lose massive amounts of muscle and lack ability to use force or threat there of so once agian we are talking about hard core users.
so hmmm if drugs became legal why would even these people have to use force? which the claim is out there but lacks backing.
many people use drugs both over the counter and illict some are pre determined to cause harm to other some just live the life and leave others alone.
DOING DRUGS doesnt make you into a person who steals or uses force in and of itself.
I could point out free Heroin offered and less then one percent of original group return for more free uncriminal heroin. part of the high and getting high involved that it is illegal.