Two arrested in Mount Vernon Drug Bust
Sunday December 31st 2006, 3:55 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from courierpress.com-

Indiana State Police arrested two people for manufacturing the illegal drug methamphetamine at a Mount Vernon, Ind., house after a sergeant driving by the residence at about 9:30 p.m. Saturday smelled a strong odor of ether. Other troopers were called to the house. A trooper saw items used in making methamphetamine in plain view and police then obtained a search warrant. Police found methamphetamine and marijuana inside the house.

Arrested on preliminary charges of manufacturing methamphetamine were Patrick Martin, 34, of Mount Vernon, and Lisa McCroy, 28, of Evansville. Both were being held at the Posey County jail Sunday.



Six arrested after drug bust in Newark
Sunday December 31st 2006, 3:47 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from wmdt.com-

NEWARK, Del. (AP) - Police have arrested six men after a drug raid in Newark.

Officers from the patrol and drug unit responded Friday night to the Glasgow Court Trailer Park with a search warrant for drugs.

Police say when they entered the home six people started running in different directions but all were eventually apprehended.

According to police, two men had a combined total of 40 grams of crack cocaine.

Nineteen-year-old Jason Buchanan, 19-year-old Joshua Tyner and 40-year-old Charles Irwin were charged with trafficking cocaine and other drug offenses.

Three other men face less serious charges.



Mike Tyson Drug Bust
Saturday December 30th 2006, 6:38 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from antimusic.com

-(Cat8Dog) And in this jail cell… busted for driving under the influence and possession of cocaine … former heavyweight champion of the world… Mike Tyson. Better yet, he was busted after almost crashing into a cop car! Smooth move, Mike!

Tyson was arrested after almost hitting a cop SUV while leaving a nightclub in Scottsdale, Arizona at around 1:45 a.m. Friday Morning. The Folks at TMZ said that “the arresting officer was part of a special holiday DUI task force.” Oops.

Seems Mike has turned away from consuming human ears and turned to cocaine among other things. TMZ are pros at digging up the celebutard dirt and they got their hands on the court papers related to Tyson’s arrest. They report that tests revealed that Tyson was “under the influence of a depressant, stimulant and cannabis.” That’s not all, Tyson just wants help. He supposedly admitted his problems to the arresting officer. Tyson “stated he is an addict and has a problem”

The court report also states, “Mike admitted to possessing bags of cocaine and said he uses anytime he can get his hands on it.” Mike, Mike, Mike ever hear of Miranda? You didn’t have to cop to that to the cops. You need to watch more Law & Order repeats until then you have the right to remain stupid.

Luckily for Mike, he’s a celebrity and didn’t spend much time behind bars. He was released without posting bond and ordered to report for drug and alcohol tests until his next court appearance, a preliminary hearing, on January 16.



Lawyer: Suspect in bust ‘no drug lord’
Saturday December 30th 2006, 6:28 pm
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from chron.com-

By Anita Hassan and Jennifer Leahy

The man accused of drug trafficking in connection with a large drug bust is a mechanic who was asked “by a friend” to work on the tractor-trailer that police linked to a warehouse where several tons of marijuana were discovered, his attorney said Friday.

“He is a certified diesel mechanic who was called by a friend to come and work on the tractor-trailer. He has never been inside the warehouse in his entire life,” said defense attorney Don Becker. “He has no prior drug cases, owns a house, has kids. He’s no drug lord. He is a guy trying to make it from paycheck to paycheck. He even searched the trailer before getting in to work on it.”

Becker added that his client, Louis Mendez, suffers from cerebral palsy and suffered physical discomfort during the arrest.

Mendez, 29, was charged with possession of a controlled substance as well as possession of marijuana with intent to deliver. He remains incarcerated in lieu of $1 million bail in the Harris County Jail, where he declined an interview with the Houston Chronicle on Friday night.

Becker said he will request a bail reduction when Mendez appears in court Wednesday.

Harris County Sheriff’s Office spokeswoman Sgt. Dana Wolfe said Mendez was charged based on evidence at the scene, including the small amount of cocaine that was found inside the vehicle during his arrest. Wolfe said it will be up to the courts to determine Mendez’s guilt or innocence.

“They filed charges based on the evidence,” she said.

The marijuana was discovered Wednesday night in a warehouse in northwest Harris County as the result of a tip received by sheriff’s deputies.

Meanwhile, the 15,000 to 20,000 pounds of marijuana, with a street value of $25 million to $40 million, are being stored in a secure facility downtown. The drugs will eventually go up in smoke — but only after law enforcement agencies complete their investigation into the origin and composition of the narcotics.

Once the police investigation is closed and a court order is given to destroy the evidence, it will be transported to an undisclosed location and incinerated.

Before the drugs can be destroyed, however, each bundle must be tested by the Harris County Medical Examiner’s Office for tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the main hallucinogenic substance found in the cannabis plant, said Lt. J.D. Glesmann of the Sheriff’s Office’s covert operations unit.

A sample will be taken from each of the 502 packages, which range in size from 18-inch cubes to rectangular packages as long as several feet, to be assessed.

Weights of some of the bundles that appeared to be the same size also varied.

“We thought it was interesting that two bales that were the same size were two different distinct weights,” Glesmann said, explaining that may be because something else is hidden in the packages or because of the compression of the marijuana.

‘’If the marijuana hadn’t been wrapped so carefully, then you probably would have been able to smell it in the street.”

Each bundle was encased in about 2 inches of materials such as plastic, petroleum grease, and tape and was then covered in a layer of calcium carbonate, commonly known as lime.

“It (marijuana) has a pretty pungent odor, and the use of masking agents is common in these situations,” said Ray D’Alessio, spokesman for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

The marijuana bundles, which Glesmann said probably originated in Mexico and were brought to Houston through the Rio Grande Valley, were placed in large wooden crates topped with coal.

They were also labeled with car makes and numbers such as “corvet 13″ and “Ford 11″ that Glesmann said were mostly likely distribution markings. He said he believes the drugs were going to be dispersed nationally.

“The bigger the operation, the more trouble they go through (to package the drugs),” said Houston police Capt. Stephen Smith, who said the department made a 21,000-pound marijuana bust on Nov. 4. Smith said HPD also tests marijuana prior to destruction for THC levels as well as positive identification.

The registered owner of the warehouse is Tecno Properties, which did not return phone calls from the Chronicle.

Glesmann said he spoke to a representative from the company, and it seemed officials were not aware that the warehouse was being used for narcotics storage.

He added that he believed the group using the facility for storage was breaking in by cutting through the chains on the gate.

“Twenty thousand pounds of dope is a lot, but they (drug traffickers) are not in the business of storing it,” he said. “They’re in the business of getting rid of it, so it probably wouldn’t have been there very long.”

Chronicle reporter Lindsay Wise contributed to this report.



Saddam Hussein Executed
Friday December 29th 2006, 10:41 pm
Filed under: Gangster News

-from cnn.com-

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) — Former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein has been executed, according to two Arabic language media outlets.

Hussein was hanged before dawn on Saturday in Iraq, at about 6 a.m. (10 p.m. Friday ET), His attornies confirmed.
Al-Arabiya reported that Barzan Hassan, Hussein’s half-brother, and Awad Bandar, former chief justice of the Revolutionary Court, were hanged after Hussein. All three were convicted of killings in the Iraqi town of Dujail nearly 25 years ago.

Earlier, Munir Haddad, a judge on the appeals court that upheld the former dictator’s death sentence, and an adviser to Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki each confirmed the paperwork needed for Hussein’s execution had been prepared late Friday.

“All the procedures have been completed,” Haddad said.

At the same time, a U.S. district judge refused a request to stay the execution.

Attorney Nicholas Gilman said in an application for a restraining order, filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Washington, that a stay would allow Hussein “to be informed of his rights and take whatever action he can and may wish to pursue.”

Haddad had called Gilman’s filing “rubbish,” and said, “It will not delay carrying out the sentence,” which he called “final.”

Haddad also said there is no need for a presidential decree for the implementation of the execution.

He said once the handover is completed, “the sentence will be carried out swiftly, without any delay. God willing.”

Haddad, who attended the execution, said he received a call from al-Maliki’s office asking him and a prosecutor to be ready for it.

Haddad wouldn’t disclose the location of the execution and said it won’t be broadcast live on TV because of human rights issues.

“The United States may very well have had a cause to effectively take him back in the event” a judge “grants the temporary restraining order, in which case his life would then be spared at least for a period of time or until such further order of the court,” he said.

Giving Hussein to the Iraqis despite a temporary restraining order would be contempt of court, di Stefano said.

Conflicting reports These latest developments come during a day of conflicting reports over whether Hussein was in U.S. or Iraqi custody. Throughout the day, U.S. officials have not wavered in their stance that he remains in U.S. custody.

There has been speculation that Hussein would be executed before Eid Al-Adha — a holiday period that means Feast of the Sacrifice, celebrated by Muslims around the world at the climax of the hajj pilgrimage to Mecca.

There is a belief that the execution could be soon because the law does not permit executions to be carried out during religious holidays.

Eid begins Saturday for Sunnis and Sunday for Shiites and lasts for four days. Hussein is a Sunni Muslim.

Baha al-Araji, a member of the Iraqi parliament from the Muqtada al-Sadr bloc, said the government is seeking the “opinion of clerics, both Sunni and Shiite, whether they can carry out the death sentence against Saddam on Saturday since it’s the start of Eid.”

“The clerics would issue a fatwa saying that due to exceptional circumstances the death sentence can be carried out,” said al-Araji, whose political movement represents Shiite Muslims.

Sheikh Jalaleddin al-Saghir, who is both a Shiite cleric and a parliament member from the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, said, “There is absolutely no problem from a religious standpoint to carry out the death sentence at the start of Eid.”

Baghdad now is in its regular overnight curfew, and Iraqi and U.S. troops are bracing for protests and violence if an execution occurs.

Ministerial aides said government officials have been in “emergency meeting,” and al-Araji confirmed that officials were still debating whether to execute the former Iraqi leader on Saturday.

Gallows in Green Zone Al-Araji said the scaffolding where Hussein is to be hanged is in Baghdad’s Green Zone, the center of power for coalition officials.

He said he saw a judge, a cleric and a physician at the site. According to Iraqi law, these people have to be present at the execution.

“These people were told to remain there on standby waiting for orders for the government,” al-Araji said.

Al-Araji told CNN that he and other parliament members and government officials have been cleared to attend the hanging.

“I would have wished for this to happen in Sadr City, where he has killed the most people,” he said.

If the hanging does occur on Saturday, it will “most likely take place between 6 a.m. and noon,” he said. Those hours translate to 10 p.m. Friday and 4 a.m. Saturday in the Eastern United States.

Speaking from Doha, Qatar, Najib al-Nuaimi, one of Hussein’s defense attorneys, said Hussein’s “fate definitely [is] in the hands of God.”

Meeting with half-brothers Another defense lawyer, Badie Aref, told CNN that Hussein met with two of his half-brothers in his cell on Thursday and passed on messages and instructions to his family.

“President Saddam was just bracing for the worst, so he wanted to see his brothers and pass on some messages and instructions to his family,” Aref said. The half brothers who visited were Sabawi and Wathban Ibrahim Hassan al-Tikriti, he said.

Another of Hussein’s half-brothers, Barzan al-Tikriti, has been sentenced to death and is being held in Iraq under the same charges as Hussein.

Aref said the U.S. soldiers guarding Hussein on Tuesday took away a radio he kept in his cell so he could not hear news reports about his death sentence, which was confirmed that day.

“They did not want him to hear the news from the appeals court upholding the sentence,” he said. “They gave him back the radio on Wednesday.”

Aref said Saddam found out about the appeals court verdict “a few hours after it was announced.”

Crimes against humanity Hussein was convicted on November 5 of crimes against humanity in connection with the killings of 148 people in the rown of Dujail after an attempt on his life.

The dictator was found guilty of murder, torture and forced deportation.

The Dujail episode falls within 12 of the worst cases out of 500 documented “baskets of crimes” during the Hussein regime.

The U.S. State Department says torture and extrajudicial killings followed the Dujail killings and that 550 men, women and children were arrested without warrants.

CNN’s Aneesh Raman, Arwa Damon, Ryan Chilcote, Sam Dagher, Jomana Karadsheh and Ed Henry contributed to this report.



Drug Bust nets $180K
Friday December 29th 2006, 10:27 am
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from calsun.canoe.ca-

By Nadia Moharib

Red Deer police have seized about $180,000 in cash and an assortment of drugs after wrapping up a month-long investigation.

They also found six pounds of pot, five ounces of crack cocaine and an ounce of magic mushrooms.

Red Deer investigators assisted Calgary’s integrated proceeds of crime unit with a search warrant on a home there Dec. 21.

Shane Clifford White, 22, of Red Deer, faces drug trafficking and possession charges, as well as one count of of possession of proceeds of crime.



Police make record Drug Bust
Friday December 29th 2006, 10:21 am
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from wsbtv.com-

Albertville police arrested two people in what they are calling the biggest crystal meth seizure in Marshall County’s history.

Police confiscated almost five pounds of crystal meth, also called “ice,” and $25,000 in cash during the drug bust yesterday at the home of an Albertville couple. Police said that, in addition to the drugs and cash, they seized four handguns, an SKS assault rifle and three vehicles. Police arrested Roberto Salgado Giles, who also goes by Roberto Ramos, and Ambrosa Salgado Cambarai. Each is charged with one count of methamphetamine trafficking, and more charges could follow. Police are also holding three other people for questioning.



Six arrested in Fairfield Drug Bust
Friday December 29th 2006, 10:14 am
Filed under: Drug Busts

-from timesheraldonline.com-

FAIRFIELD - Police arrested six Fairfield residents Wednesday during a drug bust in two separate apartments in the 2000 block of Bristol Lane.

Arrested were Terry Cook, 38; DeLouis Marks, 21; Sandra Kidd, 46; Sherise Branford, 26; Eric Durkins, 32; and Andrew Bell, 25. They were booked into Solano County Jail on charges including possessing cocaine and maintaining residences for drug dealing.

Authorities seized several ounces of cocaine, a loaded handgun, ammunition, drug paraphernalia, and a small amount of marijuana, officials said.