Tag: Georgia

  • Woman Sues After Faulty Drug Test Mistakes Cotton Candy For Meth

    Woman Sues After Faulty Drug Test Mistakes Cotton Candy For Meth

    The Georgia woman spent four months in jail because of a faulty roadside drug test mistook her cotton candy for meth.

    A Georgia woman has filed suit after spending almost four months in jail following a faulty roadside drug test that wrongly flagged a baggie of blue cotton candy as crystal meth, according to USA Today.

    Dasha Fincher’s federal legal claim, filed Thursday, targets the county commissioners, the deputies who arrested her and the company that makes the test.

    The arrest that started it all stemmed from a traffic stop on New Year’s Eve in 2016. Two deputies pulled over Fincher and her boyfriend after spotting dark window tints on their car – though authorities later admitted dark window tints are actually legal.

    Police later wrote that the couple seemed nervous, even though they handed over their IDs and agreed to a search of the car. During that search, the lawmen found a plastic baggie with something blue inside. 

    One of the deputies did a roadside test on the hood of the car – and told her he’d found methamphetamine.

    “I knew it was cotton candy,” she told the New York Times, “and for him to come back and say it was meth, I really didn’t know what to say.”

    For close to the next four months, Fincher was held in the county jail on $1 million bail, missing family events – like the birth of her grandsons. 

    “It seemed like everything was going on and I wasn’t there,” she told the Times. “I wasn’t there for my family when they needed me.”

    Then, on March 22 a crime lab finally realized there were no drugs in the bag. But it wasn’t until the following month that the results were finally forwarded to local prosecutors, and on April 4 Fincher was released.

    “It was crystal-like substances, it was in a cellophane bag, and it was under the floor mat,” Elizabeth Bobbitt, the interim district attorney for the area, told the New York paper. “We are not crazy people down here who would like to arrest people for cotton candy.” 

    Roadside drug tests have long been a source of controversy and false positives, as detailed in a 2016 New York Times Magazine and ProPublica investigation

    Based on those $2 tests, officers have wrongly identified everything from motor oil to cat litter to donut glaze as illicit drugs.  

    “Why, it’s almost as if these field tests will say whatever law enforcement officers want them to,” Radley Balko wrote in the Washington Post in 2015.

    In this case, the suit alleges, it was blue food coloring that foiled the test and netted a faulty result.

    The test-maker did not respond to a request for comment.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Drugs That Look Like Children’s Candy Discovered By Georgia Police

    Drugs That Look Like Children’s Candy Discovered By Georgia Police

    The cartoon-shaped pills were molded in the likeness of Homer Simpson, the Minions and Hello Kitty.

    Popular cartoon characters in the form of brightly colored candy are actually hidden receptacles for drugs, says the Hapeville Police Department in Georgia.

    The cartoon-shaped pills were molded in the likeness of iconic cartoon characters like Homer Simpson, Hello Kitty, and the Minions.

    The Hapeville Police Department Cpl. Jason Dyer wrote a Facebook post updating the community on the “major bust,” as reported by The State.

    The bust—conducted by the Hapeville Criminal Investigation Division—included cash, firearms (including a stolen gun), suspected marijuana, pills, cannabis lollipops, and suspected powder cocaine.

    Both the cartoon-shaped, unspecified “pills” and the lollipops were designed to look like children’s candy, prompting the Hapeville police to ask community leaders such as teachers and parents to be on the lookout for suspicious goodies.

    The Facebook post by the Hapeville Police Department prompted a few commenters who felt the police department was wasting its time on what one called, “stripper money,” apparently referring to the piles of dollar bills in the photo. Other citizens were grateful to the police department for its hard work.

    This bust comes a month before Halloween, a time when parents might feel a little paranoid about the candy kids are getting a hold of. Old stories of tampering with Halloween candy might come to mind, but in general, candy tampering has not been a real danger for American children.

    In 2017, a major drug bust in Atlanta included meth lollipops shaped like flowers. While concerns were that drug dealers were targeting children, drug policy expert Bill Piper of the Drug Policy Alliance disagreed.

    “It’s easy for people to fall for this marketing to children because there’s this misconception that drug dealers are standing on the street corner handing out free drugs,” Piper told The Washington Post. “Adults don’t want nasty-tasting stuff either. We especially find in the flavored meth, a lot of that turned out to be flavoring for adults.”

    In addition, drugs that look like candy are easier to move throughout communities.

    That being said, the Channel Islands has a Halloween candy safety tip page on its website that is worth a visit for parents. One tip states that parents should tell their children not to open or consume any non-commercially packaged candies or foods on Halloween night.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Mom Accused Of Letting Teen Daughter Run Pot Shop From Bedroom

    Mom Accused Of Letting Teen Daughter Run Pot Shop From Bedroom

    Police reportedly uncovered 80 pounds of cannabis in the closet of the master bedroom.

    A 15-year-old girl is in state custody after sheriff’s deputies alleged that she made cannabis deals out of her bedroom, supported by her mother.

    On August 17, the Merced County Sheriff’s Office served a search warrant at the family’s Delhi, California home. The search uncovered 80 pounds of cannabis in the master bedroom closet and 12 “large marijuana plants” in the backyard growing in a “makeshift greenhouse,” according to sheriff’s deputies. A loaded AK-47 was also found.

    According to a statement posted on Facebook, during the investigation officers allegedly learned that “the 15-year-old daughter was given marijuana from her mother to use and sell from her bedroom.”

    In addition, officers found “packaged marijuana, edibles and other items associated with the sales and use of marijuana” that they say belonged to the 15-year-old girl.

    The girl and another minor have since been removed from the home by Child Protective Services. Two adults in the home have been arrested—Jose Reyes Martinez, 44, on suspicion of marijuana crimes, possessing an assault weapon and assault on a child; and Norma Angelica Alvarez, 44, on suspicion of marijuana crimes and child endangerment.

    Parents all across the United States have lost custody of their children for providing them marijuana, but unlike this particular case—as far as we know—it is often to treat debilitating disorders like epilepsy.

    One recent example happened in Macon, Georgia, where Suzeanna and Matthew Brill are fighting for custody of their son David, who suffers from seizures. The couple had illegally purchased cannabis to try and ease David’s seizures, after prescription medication had failed to make a difference.

    The family was on the waiting list for Georgia’s Low THC Oil Program, but couldn’t wait any longer.

    The parents say the cannabis was “a miracle” for David. “I was tired of seeing my kid half-dead all the time,” said Suzeanna. “[Marijuana] helped my son where all other options had failed.”

    Cannabis is illegal in the state of Georgia. Only possession of up to 20 fluid ounces of low THC oil by qualified residents is allowed. Seizure disorder, Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease are among the qualifying conditions for Georgia’s limited medical cannabis program.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Non-Profit Launches Foster Care Program For Kids Affected By Opioid Crisis

    Non-Profit Launches Foster Care Program For Kids Affected By Opioid Crisis

    The Georgia-based program is “designed to help children from newborns to the age of 21 years find a loving home.”

    A Georgia nonprofit called Christian City Children’s Village has plans to begin its own foster care system due to the alarming number of children being left parentless at the hands of the opioid crisis.

    According to a media release on the organization’s website, foster care needs in the state have increased 100% in the past five years, bringing the total number of children to more than 15,000. 

    In February, Christian City introduced the Crossroads Foster Care & Adoption Program, which provides “private and public foster care, foster-to-adoption and public adoption” for children within a 50-mile radius of Union City, Georgia.

    “We wanted to respond to this issue by increasing the number of loving homes available to children in foster care and that is when we decided to launch the Crossroads program,” Len Romano, President & CEO of Christian City, said in the release.

    The program serves newborns to age 21 and provides training, home studies, support and access to the Christian City thrift store for families that are interested in adoption or foster care.

    According to the website, the program is “designed to find and equip wonderful families for children in need of a loving home… Permanency is the ultimate goal for each child through either reunification with the child’s birth family or adoption.”

    “We offer a crisis program for the foster child and adoptive parents. If a caregiver reports to us the child is under distress when acclimating to their new environment, we bring the child back onto the Christian City Children’s Village campus for 48 hours. Here, we give the child the attention and any skills they may need to help them reintegrate into their new home,” Michaela Guthrie, Program Executive for the Crossroads Foster Care and Adoption Program, said in the media release.

    Beginning July 1, Christian City started a contract with the state of Georgia to assist the Georgia Division of Family and Children Services (DFCS) in placing children in appropriate foster or adoptive homes.

    In other words, CBS46 states, children from the DFCS can be referred to the Crossroads Foster Care & Adoption Program. 

    “A lot of children who come into the foster care system have faced various types of trauma, whether it be abuse or neglect,” Guthrie told CBS46. “So, we really want to make sure that the families that will be taking care of them from this point in time and maybe a forever home.”

    View the original article at thefix.com