Archive for Drugs

Despite Arrest, Andrew Young Says T.I. Is Making ‘Marvelous Progress’!


Multiplatinum rapper T.I. starred in the nation’s No. 1 movie, recently married his longtime girlfriend, taped a music special for VH1 and was wrapping up a new album. But after an arrest Wednesday in California, there are questions about whether he’s returning to the music charts – or prison.

The Grammy-winning hitmaker, who is on three years of probation, was taken into custody with wife Tameka “Tiny” Cottle on suspicion of possessing methamphetamines after police pulled over their Maybach in West Hollywood. They were released on $10,000 bail early Thursday.

While charges have yet to be filed, the case has the potential to put one of music’s top names in behind bars yet again.
“We’re not making any observations at this time,” said Ed Garland, a defense attorney for T.I. “This is an unfortunate occurrence, and we do not know what the outcome will be.”
His music label, Atlantic Records, also said it “would be premature to speculate about the current situation given that there is an ongoing investigation of this matter.”
Known as the “King of the South,” T.I is a top name in hip-hop, and pop. Born as Clifford Harris, he sold millions of albums since his debut and racked up hits like “Whatever You Like” and “U Don’t Know Me.” He also had top collaborations with artists including Rihanna, Jay-Z and Justin Timberlake.
But his celebrated career was put in jeopardy in 2007 when he was caught trying to buy semiautomatic weapons on the way to a BET Awards show. The Atlanta rapper, who has served time for drug and other offenses, pleaded guilty to weapons charges and served seven months in an Arkansas prison and three months in a halfway house in Georgia.
He was ordered not to commit another federal, state or local crime while on supervised release, or to illegally possess a controlled substance. He was also told to take at least three drug tests after his release and to participate in a drug and alcohol treatment program.
T.I. didn’t appear to need government intervention to stay out of trouble. The rapper talked of a new, positive start: He spoke to kids 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, the rapper starred in the MTV reality show, “T.I.’s Road to Redemption: 45 Days to Go.”
“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. told The Associated Press in July.
After his release, he wasted little time returning to the spotlight. He released new music and was one of the stars of “Takers,” a shoot-’em-up about an armored truck robbery that goes bad. He is working on an album, which was slated to come out this year, and last month, he taped a VH1 “Storytellers” performance.
T.I. also married Cottle, the former singer for the 1990s R&B group Xscape; she has found new fame as the star of the BET reality show “Tiny & Toya.”
Cottle took to her Twitter on Thursday, thanking fans for support and prayers. “We love u guys:) going 2bed now! So glad 2b n a nice clean bed,” she wrote.
A representative for VH1 said it was too early to determine how his arrest might affect the upcoming special. A representative for “Takers” did not immediately return a request for comment.
T.I.’s probation officer has asked him to return to Atlanta, said Don Samuel, one of T.I.’s attorneys. He said it was unclear when T.I. would return to his hometown.
U.S. Attorney Sally Yates, Atlanta’s top federal law enforcement official, said she would not speculate on what could happen to Harris. “The probation office is in the process of determining what happened and will make a recommendation regarding Mr. Harris when they have all the facts,” she said.
His probation officer can recommend that the terms of the rapper’s probation be changed, such as to require that he take more drug counseling classes and undergo more frequent drug tests. Or the officer could ask the judge to revoke the rapper’s probation, which was set to end in 2013. That could lead to a prison sentence.
The decision would be made by U.S. District Judge Charles Pannell Jr., who presided over the original case.
Dwight Thomas, another T.I. lawyer, also stressed it was too early to determine the impact of the arrest. “We don’t have a full grasp of the facts circumstances. We don’t know the violation,” he said. “I will remain optimistic until this matter is favorably resolved.”
Young, who is an ordained minister, married Harris and Cottle last month in Miami. He said T.I. has made “marvelous progress” and that he is a good father and partner.
He also was skeptical about the charges against the rapper and the circumstances of the arrest.
“I assume that you’re innocent until you’re proven guilty,” Young told The AP in a telephone interview. “If he was driving and smoking marijuana, that is absolutely stupid. But why was he pulled over in the first place? Because he had a Maybach? Because he was black? Because they know who he is and resent his success?”
Young said his advice to Harris has been focused on violence, not drug use.
“We never talked about drugs,” Young said, but added: “Maybe I should have.

It can be just DUMP Parents! – Sep 11,2009 – Are parents really the problem?


I was enjoying some light-hearted conversation with a high school teacher recently, when suddenly the conversation took a major turn. He began to discuss what kids talk about during their work time in his class. As a high school teacher, he’s pretty much heard it all, but in recent years he says the conversations are beyond surprising.

“If you just let the kids talk and don’t interrupt you’ll be surprised what you hear them talking about,” he said. “The kids know everybody that’s doing drugs, from the athletes to the kids on the outside. There’s a lot of marijuana use, a lot.”

Recently the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University presented its 13th annual “back-to-school survey,” which identifies factors and influences in teen substance abuse. The survey goes hand-in-hand with the comments from the high school teacher. In addressing the increase in the availability of drugs in his school, the teacher said “I don’t know what the parents are thinking.” That’s just what the annual report focused on-problem parents.

The report centered on four failures of problem parents. They do not monitor where their children are on school nights (Monday-Thursday). They do not safeguard prescriptions medications. They do not address the problem of drugs in the schools. They do not set good examples.

Let’s take a look at this in greater detail. The report said that 46 percent of the kids surveyed (ages 12-17) said they leave the house on school nights. But only 14 percent of parents said their kids go out. That’s a huge disparity. Moreover, half of the kids who stay out until 10:00 or after say that alcohol, marijuana or other drugs are being used by the kids they are with. If the teens are home between 8:00 and 10:00, the percentage drops to 29 percent. Of course, the parents, if confronted about this situation, will say they are concerned.

When I was in my 20′s I recall talking to a police detective about kids who were vandalizing property around my apartment complex. The detective told me that he catches the kids, calls their parents who told him, “When he’s out of the house, he’s not our problem.” In responding to my question as to what I could do, he replied, “Don’t leave any marks.” That was his way of telling me that law enforcement was doing it’s part, but the real problem area was the parents.

Parents do not always have a realistic picture of what is under their nose. A third of the parents surveyed said that the presence of drugs in the schools where their children attend has no impact on whether or not their child has tried drugs. Their child would never do drugs; it’s always the other children. Worse yet is the inattention paid to prescription medications, especially pain-killers. One-third of the kids said they knew a kid who was abusing prescription drugs found right in the medicine cabinet of their home. Another third of the kids say they can get prescription drugs from classmates. It’s like parents are replacing pushers.

My teacher friend also said that some kids say that parents actually get high with their kids. The report says the same thing. Shocking is the fact that the report says a quarter of the teens surveyed know of a parent that does this. My friend said that many parents do not consider marijuana use a problem, even for their teenage children. Every report about drug use at an early age leading to drug addiction later would squash such idiotic thinking. Of course, if there were a public forum discussing drugs in our schools, all of the problem parents would be first in line to criticize and demand that our schools be drug free.

The report was very detailed in its findings. My friend the teacher just shared what he heard in class. He’s a parent too, with concerns for the safety and well being of his children. He knows that the real education about drugs takes place in the home, and he accepts responsibility to make sure that his children know the facts. The lure of drugs is so strong, so constant and so pervasive that even his best efforts may not prevent one of his kids from experimenting with drugs, or worse yet, getting into trouble with drug use.

If you ‘re a parent, I encourage you to read the entire study. Don’t be a problem parent. Be a part of the solution.

Ned Wicker is the Addictions Recovery Chaplain at Waukesha Memorial Hospital Lawrence Center He author’s a website for addiction support:
Drug-Addiction-Support.org


Drug Addiction Symptoms

Drug-Addiction-Support.org/12-Step-Program.html
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Michael Jackson’s Death Calling Attention to Prescription Drug Abuse


Close friend to Jackson, Deepak Chopra, reported that Jackson had asked him for prescriptions to pain killers in the past. Chopra said that he then realized that Michael must have been asking many people for prescriptions to the powerful drugs.

In an article in the Huffington Press, Chopra in part blames Jackson’s dependence on these drugs on medical colleagues who failed to realize Jackson’s growing drug addiction could lead to his death.

Jackson is known to have taken prescriptions ranging from Xanax to Demerol.

Oxycodone and hydrocodone are both synthetic opiate pain relievers similar to Demerol which Jackson is reported to have been injected with shortly before his cardiac arrest.

It is unfortunate that prescription drug abuse becomes alive as a topic for media discussion after a celebrity death.   Anna Nicole’s and Heath Ledger’s deaths took center stage earlier, but the problem with prescription medication abuse continued to increase and emergency rooms are still seeing too many accidental overdoses.

 In a recent press conference Joseph A. Califano Jr., the National Center on Drug Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University’s director and president said:

 

 ”Aggressive marketing of controlled drugs to physicians . . . is designed to increase profits with little regard for abuse potential, Our nation is in the throes of an epidemic of controlled prescription drug abuse and addiction.”

 


The ease by which many Americans can get a prescription for powerful pain medications and psychiatric drugs is alarming.

More than 15 million Americans abuse controlled substances—double the amount from a decade ago, according to a report issued by CASA.  This represents a clear problem for America because there is virtually no increase in drug treatment available and no controls on marketing.

Narconon of Georgia provides drug treatment and education for the entire southeast region. Narconon Drug Rehab of Georgia is a non-traditional drug abuse treatment program.

15 Officers in Illinois Are Charged in F.B.I. Sting


Fifteen Illinois law enforcement officers were charged Tuesday in an F.B.I. sting on counts that included accepting cash in exchange for providing armed protection for drug dealing operations in south suburban Chicago.

Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, who described the charges as “particularly shocking,” said two of the officers helped an undercover Federal Bureau of Investigation agent unload and deliver duffel bags stuffed with drugs that had been flown in on a private plane.

“Ideally, it should be hard to find one corrupt officer,” Mr. Fitzgerald said in a written statement, “and it should never be easy to find 15 who allegedly used their guns and badges to protect people they believed were dealing drugs, instead of arresting them.”

The defendants were charged with conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine and/or heroin in drug dealing operations that played out in parking lots at suburban shopping centers and hotels. They include 10 Cook County sheriff’s correctional officers, two of whom are on active duty with the National Guard in Afghanistan; four officers with the suburban Harvey Police Department; and one Chicago police officer. Two other men who were not affiliated with the law enforcement agencies were charged as well.

According to the United States attorney’s office, two of those charged, Ahyetoro A. Taylor and Raphael Manuel, provided protection in May for a man who they believed was brokering large-scale drug transactions but was an undercover F.B.I. agent.

Officials said Mr. Taylor and Mr. Manuel boarded a small aircraft at the DuPage airport, piloted by two other undercover agents, and began counting packages stuffed inside four duffel bags that were said to be carrying a total of 176 pounds of cocaine.

The officers then helped the undercover agent remove the duffel bags from the plane and carry them through the airport to the agent’s car, then watched in a nearby parking lot as another undercover agent took the bags and drove away, the United States attorney’s office said.

Officials said the agent posing as the drug broker then paid Mr. Taylor and Mr. Manuel $4,000 each. Officials said the agent paid a total of $44,000 to 16 of the defendants.

The sting also revealed police officers protecting a high-stakes poker game, providing security for the transportation of large amounts of cash and selling powder cocaine, according to Robert D. Grant, special agent in charge of the Chicago office of the F.B.I.

“The almost systemic corruption that this investigation uncovered is quite troubling, especially given that most of those charged are sworn law enforcement officers,” said Mr. Grant in a written statement. “One would have hoped that the many public corruption investigations that have previously been announced would have served to deter this type of conduct. Apparently, that is not the case.”

Efforts to find or contact lawyers for the suspects were not successful on Tuesday evening.

Indian River authorities shut down crack sales operation


— Authorities shut down a crack cocaine operation at an apartment that featured surveillance equipment and a bank teller-style window for drug sales within the home.

The Indian River County Sheriff’s Office and the Vero Beach Police Department had been investigating the apartment in the 1300 block of 33rd Street, Vero Beach, for two months before a SWAT team moved in Thursday. Deputies and officers also set up a sting operation at the home as buyers continued to drive up to the complex for their fix, authorities said.

“People told us it was like a 7-Eleven” for drugs, Detective Scott Sposato said.

Investigators discovered a 8-inch hole had been cut into one of the interior walls of the home, similar to the set-up of a bank teller window. Sposato said the window helped prevent face-to-face encounters between dealers and buyers. Investigators searching the home also found night goggles and a video surveillance system intended to thwart law enforcement, they said.

Paul Bryant, 28, who rents the apartment, was charged with illegal interruption of oral communications. He posted $1,000 bail Friday at the Indian River County Jail.

A neighbor of Bryant’s, Arthur Tanner, 64, showed up during the sting operation to trade a rock of cocaine for three bags of hot dog buns, according to a report, Tanner was charged with possession and purchase of cocaine. He remained at the jail Monday in lieu of $15,000 bail.

A woman caught during the sting, Anita Hise, 53, of the 900 block of 13th Street, struggled with a deputy and bit his hand, according to her arrest affidavit. Hise, who was being held at the jail Monday in lieu of $25,000 bail, was charged with battery on a law enforcement officer, possession and purchase of cocaine.

Six other people were charged in Thursday’s sting, and authorities recovered 14 grams of crack cocaine — worth more than $1,500 — and $600 cash.