Articles Posted in Drug Offenses & Drug Trafficking

Not good news for Bucs fans as they woke up this morning and got ready for a 1:00 p.m. kickoff against the St. Louis Rams at Raymond James in Tampa.

Bucs Tight End Jerramy Stevens, 30, was arrested (again) and charged with Felony Possession of Marijuana with Intent to Sell, Felony Possession of Marijuana (over 20 grams) and a Misdemeanor of Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, according to authorities with the Tampa Police Department. A copy of Stevens’ Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office Booking Sheet has been hyperlinked to this blog.”Obviously Jerramy won’t be playing today,” said Jonathan Grella, the director of public relations for the Buccaneers, said before the game against the St. Louis Rams in Tampa.”We are deeply disappointed by the news,” Grella said. “We’ll treat this matter with the seriousness that it deserves.”

A Tampa police Sergeant pulled Stevens over at Cypress Street and West Shore Boulevard just after 7 p.m. for loud music, police said.

After smelling marijuana coming from the inside of the purple 2006 Ford truck, the Sergeant searched it and found thirty eight (38) grams of marijuana (a Felony amount in the State of Florida).

Stevens was arrested and taken to Tampa’s Orient Road Jail without incident. He was released on $4,500 bail a few hours later.

Stevens has a history of alcohol-related arrests including a 2007 conviction for Driving Under the Influence (DUI) in Arizona, which resulted in a one-game suspension and a 30-day jail sentence.

Presumably, the NFL will come down harder on Stevens after this arrest. Fortunately, former University of Miami (shameless plug for my law school) star Kellen Winslow is having another standout year.
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According to a recent story in the USA Today, as illegal prescription drug use soars, the number of cases of Driving Under the Influence (DUI) in which the substance is a prescription drug rather than alcohol is rising steadily.
But prosecuting and obtaining convictions against suspects charged with DUI Involving Prescription Drugs can be a challenge.Many states, including Florida, do not require a test to quantify the amount of drugs in a person’s body in a DUI case, and impairment is difficult to prove.

“What we and other states have run into historically is that there is a well-developed system to quantify the amount of alcohol in the human body,” said Rob Parker, a Brevard County, Fla., prosecutor.

However, “when you have Oxycodone or an opiate, we do not have a well-developed way to quantify the amount of drugs so that a jury can then compare that value to a standard established as an unlawful amount for when operating an automobile.”

Parker prosecuted a man charged with four (4) counts of DUI after a crash in Melbourne in 2007. Minutes after the accident, a police officer observed that the 33-year-old driver’s eyes were bloodshot, his eyelids droopy and his speech mumbled. A blood sample from the driver tested positive for the presence of prescription drugs.

“The jury heard all of that and could not conclude that he was DUI with drugs beyond reasonable doubt,” Parker said.

The jury acquitted the driver of the DUI charges in August.

A DUI charge is the same whether the suspect is accused of driving while influenced by alcohol or drugs.

In Florida, the charge can be proved in two ways: a blood alcohol content of .08 or higher, or if the driver demonstrates he is under the influence of alcohol or a drug that “impairs his normal faculties.”

The second is not so cut and dried.

Law enforcement has limited means to prove impairment. Field sobriety tests (or Field Sobreity Exercises – as some law enforcement officers are trained to call them) are one tool. The state also sometimes relies on “Drug Recognition Experts” (DRE’s), police officers who have completed specialized training in detecting impairment due to drugs.Michelle Perlman, misdemeanor division chief for the Brevard State Attorney’s office, said her office recommends law enforcement agencies get a DRE to the scene as soon as possible if a suspected DUI involves drugs.

“This cannot usually be conclusively diagnosed by the average police officer,” she said.

There are about a dozen DRE’s in Brevard, where more than 2,000 people were charged with operating a vehicle under the influence in 2009. As is common around the country, Brevard does not separately track DUI’s involving drugs.

Cpl. Wendy Wheeler, who heads the DUI unit at the Brevard County Sheriff’s Office and who is a certified expert, said it can take three (3) to six (6) months for an officer to become a DRE.

“The program is real intense,” she said.

Another important tool is a patrol car dashboard camera that can record impaired drivers. But not all police vehicles have them.

When cases go to Trial, a lot is up to the officer and the attorney, Perlman said.

“I do think that we see more difficulty in obtaining guilty verdicts on drug DUIs and that is probably because we are unable to prove the amount of drug in the person’s system or the precise time when it was consumed,” Perlman said. “I think if we can show a quantitative analysis, we will get a lot more plea deals.”

Florida law does not require reporting the quantity of a drug in a driver’s body in DUI cases. But the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) has started to conduct quantitative tests for drugs like Cannabis and prescribed drugs like Xanax, Valium and Ativan and the date-rape drug GHB.

“We will continue to add quantitative tests for additional drugs,” said Heather Smith, an FDLE spokeswoman.

She said law enforcement agencies also have the option to seek similar testing done by private labs “if the drug is one that FDLE does not currently quantify.”

Defense Attorney Steve Casanova, who handles scores of local DUI cases, said traces of some drugs can stay in a person’s system for as long as thirty (30) days.

“How do you prove it was affecting him at the time of the arrest?” Casanova said.

In other cases, the suspect may have been prescribed the drug legally.

One state quantifying drug usage in DUI cases is Nevada, where the statute mentions specific quantities of some drugs that have to be present in a person’s blood or urine.

But even when the presence of drugs can be quantified, the effects they have on different people may not be the same, said Joanne Michaels, program director for the National Traffic Law Center in Virginia.

“What they do in different amounts in different people is still being studied,” she said. “Toxicologists are raising concerns because it can be an issue.”
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According to a recent story in the St. Petersburg Times, a Largo woman accused of fraudulently obtaining 5,670 oxycodone pills in about a year’s time has been arrested outside a Clearwater pharmacy, authorities said. Angela Louise Johnson, 40, of 728 Third Ave., was arrested Monday afternoon on 19 charges, including Obtaining a Controlled Substance by Fraud and Trafficking in an Illegal Substance of more than 4 grams. Johnson was being held in the Pinellas County Jail in lieu of $545,000 bail.About 1:30 p.m., Johnson left the Rx Shop on S Fort Harrison Avenue with a bag of 240 Oxycodone pills, according to a Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office arrest report. Forty (40) of the pills weighed 5 grams. Since Sept. 30, 2009, Johnson has had prescriptions for Oxycodone filled at least 25 times, and none of the pharmacists knew that she “doctor shopped,” according to the arrest report.This is becoming a way-too-common event throughout the Tampa Bay area.
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For some people, bailing out of the Pinellas County Jail is now as simple as whipping out a credit card. A recent story in the St. Pete Times describes a new county program which allows inmates to use a credit card to bond out of the Pinellas County Jail on minor offenses.

You can now use a debit card or credit card to post bail of $750 or less, instead of paying cash or using a bail bond company. It is the first program of its kind in the Tampa Bay area and one of only seven (7) in Florida.Pinellas County Sheriff Jim Coats says it’s a convenience with a purpose: to reduce the number of people in the Pinellas County Jail awaiting trial.

The program emerged from a meeting among the Sheriff, County Clerk, Chief Judge, Public Defender and State Attorney.

The $750 bail limit was a compromise between the parties. Sheriff Coats wanted $1,000 so more people could use the program. State Attorney Bernie McCabe wanted $500 (presumably, so less people would be able to bond out). The $750 limit is a start, Coats said, and might be adjusted.

The limit means only a small percentage of people in jail — those charged with minor crimes — can use the program.

Of the 3,252 people in the Pinellas County Jail Wednesday morning (September 8, 2010), 74 had bail of $750 or less. Another 1,075 people had bail between $750 and $1 million. The rest could not get out on bail. At least two dozen people have used the program since it began August 23rd.

Before now, someone had to appear in person with cash, a money order or a bail bond agent. That often meant calling mom or dad or your best friend to come bail you out.

Now anyone, even the inmate, can do it by phone with a credit or debit card.

The crimes covered by the $750 limit are mainly non-violent Misdemeanors and Traffic Offenses. For instance, No Valid Driver’s License (NVDL) or an Open Container violation carry a standard $250 bail. On the other hand, Armed Robbery with a Firearm typically carries a bail of $50,000.

A 7 percent fee will be added by Government Payment Service of Indianapolis, which runs the program. The Sheriff’s Office and Clerk’s Office each get a 10 percent cut of that fee.

Government Payment Services also accepts all liability for the transactions, said Marian Garret, the jail’s inmate records supervisor. That will help protect the government from people who use stolen credit cards or don’t pay their debts, she said.

The company has worked with the Florida Department of Corrections for more than a decade, processing Probation and Parole fees. Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin use the company for a majority of their governmental services.

Bail bond companies, which have the most to lose from such a program, are skeptical.Michael Nefzger of BAIL Florida, an association for bail agents, thinks the added fees could become exorbitant. It could also lead to more people using stolen credit cards, he said.

Nefzger said the real problem with jail crowding is too many people facing charges in which state law forbids release on bail.
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According to a recent story on ABC ActionNews.com, Detectives in Largo arrested an x-ray assistant for Prescription Drug Fraud on Sunday. Jessica Rhodes was arrested in her apartment on charges of writing over 120 prescriptions from April of 2009.The Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office (PCSO) reports the fraudulent prescriptions were used to obtain controlled substances and 21 were used for medical prescriptions. Of those used, 3,670 Hydrocodone tablets were obtained and another 45 tablets of Oxycodone. In total, Rhodes was arrested on twelve (12) Felony charges, including six (6) counts of Trafficking in Hydrocodone and six (6) counts of Obtaining a Controlled Substance by Fraud.Rhodes worked for a podiatrist for three (3) years, but had not worked there since June of this year.

A pharmacist for Target contacted sheriff’s detectives after becoming suspicious that Rhodes was getting the prescriptions every week from the podiatrist.

According to ABC ActionNews.com, Rhodes holds an active Florida Medical License as a Certified Podiatric X-ray Assistant.
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LOS ANGELES – According to a breaking story published by the Associated Press, Grammy-winning rapper T.I., who has a history of Drug Offenses and is on Federal Probation after spending time behind bars on Gun Charges, was arrested along with his wife after police smelled marijuana coming from their car, authorities said.The rapper was arrested Wednesday night in West Hollywood during a traffic stop, Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy Mark Pope told The Associated Press. Authorities said they smelled a strong marijuana odor but would not say if any other drugs were found in the car.

The 29-year-old rapper and his wife, Tameka Cottle, were released from jail at about 4 a.m. Thursday after posting $10,000 bail each, sheriff’s Deputy Luis Castro said.

T.I.’s publicist declined to comment.

The arrests follow last week’s detention of socialite Paris Hilton, who is being investigated for Felony Cocaine Possession after a motorcycle officer smelled pot wafting from her car.

The Atlanta-based rapper, whose real name is Clifford Harris Jr., is a multiplatinum hitmaker. Known as the “King of the South,” he has emerged one of music’s most profitable stars.He also has a key role in the current top box office movie “Takers.” The shoot-’em-up about an armored truck Robbery that goes bad was released last week and topped the box-office chart.

T.I. served seven (7) months in an Arkansas Federal prison and three (3) months in a Georgia halfway house on Federal Weapons Charges and was released in March. He was sentenced to serve three (3) years of supervised release after his prison sentence ended.

He was ordered not to commit another Federal, State or local crime while on supervised release, and also ordered not to illegally possess a controlled substance. He was also told to take at least three (3) drug tests after his release and to participate in a drug and alcohol treatment program.

Patrick Crosby, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney in Atlanta, had no immediate comment Thursday on whether Harris violated the terms of the judge’s order.

Since his release, the rapper, who previously spent time behind bars for Drug Offenses, has vowed to live a better life. He spoke to children about the dangers of drugs and guns, and former United Nations Ambassador Andrew Young was one of his supporters. As he prepared for his most recent sentence, he starred in the MTV reality show “T.I.’s Road to Redemption: 45 Days to Go.”

In a recent interview with The Associated Press, T.I. talked about living a more positive life.

“Right now, it’s all about moving forward and just acknowledging the blessing that are here today. … Just moving past the regrets of yesterday — the things that could’ve been done better,” T.I. said in a July interview.

Unfortunately, at this point in time, it looks like the only forward moving for T.I. is that he is one step closer to going back to Federal prison.
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LAS VEGAS – According to a breaking story released by the Associated Press, Paris Hilton was arrested on the Las Vegas Strip late Friday night after police saw a cloud of Marijuana smoke wafting from the windows of a black Cadillac Escalade driven by her boyfriend, then found a small amount of Cocaine in her possession.A crowd quickly gathered near the stop on Las Vegas Boulevard near the Wynn Las Vegas resort at about 11:30 p.m. PDT Friday, and Hilton was taken into the hotel “to keep her safe” during the initial investigation, police said.The 29-year-old socialite and her boyfriend Cy Waits were booked into the Clark County jail, police said. Watch commander Lt. Wayne Holman said Hilton was released early Saturday morning.

Officer Marcus Martin said police found that Hilton had a substance that tests later showed to be Cocaine, but did not say how much of the drug was found. She was arrested on a Possession of Cocaine charge.

Jail records showed that Waits, 34, remained held pending a court appearance on a charge of Driving Under the Influence (DUI) of alcohol or drugs. Hilton’s court date was not immediately available.

The arrest came during a week in which a Burglary attempt was made on Hilton’s Los Angeles home.

Officials said 31-year-old Nathan Lee Parada faces a Felony Burglary charge in the Tuesday incident.Authorities have said that someone carrying two big knives banged on Hilton’s window. She posted a photo of the arrest on Twitter and described it as “scary.”

Hilton was arrested this summer after the Brazil-Netherlands World Cup match in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, on suspicion of Possession of Marijuana. The case was then dropped at a midnight court hearing.

Hilton pleaded “no contest” in 2007 to alcohol-related Reckless Driving and was sentenced to 45 days in jail. After spending about 23 days in jail, Hilton told CNN host Larry King that the experience caused her to re-evaluate the role partying played in her life. She said she wanted “to help raise money for kids and for breast cancer and multiple sclerosis.”Which, I’m sure, is what she was doing last night on the Vegas strip….
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According to a story just released by the Associated Press, tormer U.S. figure skating champion Nicole Bobek has been sentenced to five (5) years Felony Probation for her role in a Crystal Methamphetamine ring in New Jersey.The 32-year-old Bobek choked up in court in Jersey City on Monday as she said she was sorry. She pleaded guilty in June to Conspiring to Distribute Methamphetamine.

“Nothing but positive things can come out of this,” Bobek said outside the Jersey City courtroom where she was sentenced Monday. “It’s been a long 1½ years. I’m looking to get back onto that ice.”

She was among twenty eight (28) people accused last year of running a network that allegedly distributed $10,000 worth of methamphetamine per week.

The alleged leader of the group, Edward Cruz Jr., was sentenced last week to sixteen (16) years in prison.

Bobek won the U.S. figure skating title in 1995. But her disappointing 17th-place finish at the 1998 Winter Olympics took a psychological toll on her, according to her lawyer, Sam DeLuca. Bobek had been skating since age 3, forgoing high school and even home schooling for the rigorous, cloistered world of professional training, DeLuca said.”Here is a girl whose star was shining … and when the star went out, when the star started fading, she was not prepared,” DeLuca said. She then fell into “a sleazy world” of drug addiction and bad influences, he said.

Hudson County Assistant Prosecutor Lisa Ledoux argued for a sentence of a year in the county jail, saying Bobek was no innocent victim and was not a minor player in the drug ring.

Superior Court Judge Kevin Callahan noted he had received letters on Bobek’s behalf from former Olympic athletes, including JoJo Starbuck, and even rock ‘n’ roll musicians he didn’t name.

Callahan warned Bobek that she was at a dangerous crossroads and that a single Violation of Probation or failed drug test could land her in prison for at least five (5) years.

Bobek, accompanied by her mother, applied to serve her probation near the family’s Jupiter, Florida home. She was also ordered to serve 250 hours of community service and pay a $2,500 fine, plus additional court expenses.
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According to an online story on BayNews9.com, members of the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO), along with the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), busted a major drug operation that was using produce shipments to smuggle Cocaine into the Tampa Bay area.

The men arrested are accused of bringing $2.5 million worth of drugs from Mexico to Tampa Bay communities like Palm River and Progress Village.Deputies say a 23-year-old college student from Texas was at the top of the operation. At the bottom were local “gang members” who distributed the drugs.

“Thirty-three gang members and drug dealers have been federally indicted to date and a dozen more are still pending Federal and State charges,” said Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) Chief Jose Docobo.

The drugs were hidden in boxes of limes. Deputies say the drug dealers hid the cocaine in packages of limes because the strong odor of a lime can hide other smells, but they say it didn’t work because K-9’s were still able to sniff out the drugs.”The limes were in boxes and inside those boxes the Cocaine was concealed inside other boxes within that pallet or shipment,” Mark Trouville, with the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).

Deputies say it was then turned into Crack Cocaine and distributed on the streets of Progress Village and Palm River.

According to the BayNews9.com story, concerns from neighborhood groups prompted the “crack down.”
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A high-profile DUI Manslaughter case from St. Petersburg has put the malt beverage, Four Loko, under the radar and created a national “buzz” about the new drink’s popularity.Demetrius Jordan, 20, has told officers that he drank Four Loko (in addition to consuming other liquor and smoking marijuana) prior to getting behind the wheel and causing a fatal crash that killed four (4) people. Four Loko is popular with young people because it combines 12 percent alcohol with caffeine.According to a recent story in the Tampa Tribune, the beverage comes in a variety of flavors and has been the subject of controversy because some believe its makers are targeting teens. U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., wants the Federal Trade Commission to investigate. He said Four Loko looks like Monster energy drinks, which do not contain alcohol.

When shown a can of Four Loko in its grape flavor, St. Petersburg registered dietitian and nutritionist Lea Russell called it “scary stuff.” She said the can looks like it appeals to kids.

“It’s definitely going to put you on a total high. I mean, we already know what caffeine does to people,” Russell said. “And so it’s going to keep you awake and allow you to keep drinking alcohol because alcohol is a depressant and now it’s giving you the caffeine so you can drink more alcohol.”

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