Articles Posted in Drug Offenses

David Dunlap was stopped on Monday in Lake Forest for rolling past a stop sign. When the officer pulled him over, he smelled a strong marijuana smell. Upon further investigation, the officer found 1 gram of marijuana on Dunlap and another 97 grams and a scale in his backpack. Dunlap said he had bought it from a nearby marijuana dispensary and was selling it to others who had medical marijuana cards. The sale of medical marijuana is only allowed by specific dispensaries according to the Compassionate Use Act. Dunlap was arrested on suspicion of possession of marijuana and possession for sale. The estimated street value of 98 grams of marijuana is about $1600.

Medical Marijuana is available to people who have chronic illnesses and who are in constant pain. Once patients have applied for a medical marijuana card and have received one, they may buy drugs from specific marijuana dispensaries throughout the state. Each state has varying laws on how much you can buy at one time. In California, you may only buy 8 ounces of marijuana at one time.

Whether you live in Santa Ana, Fullerton or Buena Park, if you are charged with possession or sale of drugs, call an experienced Orange County defense attorney to assist you.

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On Saturday, Irvine police noticed a man parked by UCI, sleeping in a running car. The individual was woken up and the car was searched. Inside the car was about 200 ecstasy pills and 2.5 gallons of GHB or liquid ecstasy. GHB is also known to be a date rape drug. He was immediately arrested for possession of a controlled substance with intent to sell. His Irvine house was then searched and police found another gallon of GHB as well as illegal steroids.

GHB effects include intoxication, happiness, desire to socialize and muscle relaxation. It is scary to think that this man had date rape drugs near a university. Hopefully, he was not selling it to students at the campus. Since he was charged with possession with intent to sell, he will need to hire an experienced criminal defense attorney to help him through the legal process.

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A Tustin couple were arrested yesterday for possessing over 100 marijuana plants after an anonymous tip led police to their home. Police found a grow room, with over 100 plants, lights, and irrigation system in place.

The police said when they went to the house they could smell marijuana. They also found some firearms inside and what looked like a bomb.

Several issues jump out on this story. First, the police said they smelled marijuana. An Orange County defense lawyer will want to examine the location of the plants to see if they could have given off an odor detectible by someone. It’s possible that the police used dogs to alert upon the scent of the plants, but either way, it will be an issue to litigate in court.

Another question is whether the suspects were growing for a marijuana/pot cooperative. It’s likely that the charges will be filed in Santa Ana Superior Court as felonies.

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Three Orange County teenage robbers, looking to get high or cook methamphetamine, punched a Target security guard in the face in order to make their getaway in a stolen BMW. Cold medicine is frequently used in manufacturing methamphetamine. Due to increase drug abuse and drug related crimes, California state law requires proof of identity in order to purchase certain types of cold medicine in bulk. Thieves have taken to stealing boxes of them and rushing out of stores, hoping to evade capture.

Frequently, the district attorney will file manufacturing charges against people arrested in these circumstances. However, there are laws dealing with the “precursor” crimes, such as possessing materials used in the manufacture of methamphetamine, which carries a shorter jail term.

Unfortunately, these three suspects, if caught, will be prosecuted under a variety of offenses, including robbery, assault, battery, burglary and grand theft auto and could face upwards of ten years in state prison.

If any of them has a history drug addiction a qualified Orange County criminal defense attorney would determine if they were eligible for a rehabilitation program in lieu of state prison, with a suspended sentence.

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The Los Angeles Times is reporting that U.S. Border Patrol agents arrested a man attempting to smuggle 24 pounds of marijuana ashore on a surfboard. Five packages of marijuana with an estimated street value of $74,400 were found inside a duffel bag the man threw into the water.

The suspect was spotted paddling off Imperial Beach, near the Mexican border. Agents went into the water to make the arrest. When agents ordered the surfer to come ashore, he threw a blue duffel bag into the water, the Border Patrol said. Agents went into the water to make the arrest.

The bag later washed ashore.

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The Los Angeles Times is reporting that Kendall Craig Farris, who heads the Over the Wall Foundation in Marina del Rey, was arrested Thursday at a Starbucks after an undercover Redondo Beach officer was allegedly sold methamphetamine and ecstasy.

According to police reports, Farris, arrived at the coffeehouse in a taxi and an undercover officer gave him an envelope containing $480 in exchange for the methamphetamine and ecstasy. Farris was subsequently arrested.

This pills turned out to be fake, but Farris was arraigned Friday on charges of selling a substance that he alleged was drugs. He is being held on $106,500 bail.

Interestingly, Farris is the author of the book “Drugs, Kids and Crime: Surviving Our Drug Obsessed Culture.”

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Anna Nicole Smith’s former boyfriend and two of her physicians pleaded not guilty at their arraignment in Los Angeles Superior Court yesterday to charges of illegally providing prescription drugs to the reality star and former Playboy model.

The Los Angeles Times is reporting that Howard K. Stern is charged with conspiracy to illegally furnish Smith with thousands of prescription pills. In their court filing, prosecutors say that all three knew Smith was an addict and were warned that the prescriptions the doctors were writing were dangerous. The charges are the culmination of a two-year, multi-agency investigation.

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Sponsors of the Proposition 5 are asking voters in November to increase treatment and eliminate incarceration for those convicted of nonviolent, drug-related crimes. The Los Angeles Times reports that the Nonviolent Offender Rehabilitation Act, funded in part by billionaire George Soros, would be “the most ambitious sentencing and prison reform in U.S. history,” according to the Drug Policy Alliance Network, a primary sponsor.

Opponents contend that the drug treatment offered in lieu of incarceration would be a “get-out-of-jail-free card” for addicts. And they say the Drug Policy Alliance Network — a spinoff of Soros’ New York-based Open Society Institute, which fights against punitive drug laws — is using the initiative to chip away at its true agenda: legalizing drugs.

Of course the benefits of Proposition 5—if passed—remains to be seen. On one side, the new system would expand the pool of criminals who could take part, creating three “tracks” for offenders to receive treatment, including, at the discretion of judges, those who commit nonviolent crimes such as theft to feed their habits. Depending on their crimes, their records and their number of treatment failures, they would gradually move from the least intensive programs to the most intensive — drug courts — and the possibility of jail or prison. And by 2010, the measure would commit the state to spending at least $460 million a year, mostly to increase treatment — and eliminate incarceration — for those who commit nonviolent crimes involving drugs or fueled by them. The measure could eventually cost Californians up to $1 billion, but also could ultimately save that much by reducing incarceration, according to the state’s nonpartisan legislative analyst.

The Times reports that on the other side are judges who complain that they will rarely be able to threaten incarceration under the Act, which they believe is most effective at coercing offenders to cooperate. And even when drugs aren’t involved, the state could no longer seek to send ex-convicts to prison for low-level parole violations, or revoke parole for actions that would qualify as misdemeanors. Law enforcement groups object to a provision that would allow the expunging of some records. For example the Act would allow a methamphetamine addict who steals cars to avoid prison, to have their record sealed after completing treatment.

Would this act be one step closer to the legalization of drugs? Under the Act. possession an ounce or less of marijuana would be an infraction, instead of a misdemeanor.

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