Posts Tagged ‘drugs’

JaMarcus Russell pleads Not Guilty to Possession of Codeine Syrup

July 21st, 2010 | Posted in Celebrity Justice by bloom | No Comments »

JaMarcus Russell plead not guilty today in connection with his arrest in
his hometown of Mobile, Alabama for possession of codeine syrup without
a valid prescription. Codeine syrup has seen a recent and dramatic rise
in use as it is a main drug used in the making of a recreational drink
called “purple drank” or “sizzurp”. Though a police investigation did
not specifically target Mr. Russell, his name as a user has been
repeatedly used both in his hometown and in Oakland as a member of the
Oakland Raiders.

Time can only tell what will happen to Mr. Russell, but when your name
is coming up multiple times in reports about illegal drug use, things
can only end badly. Mr. Russell may have other options, but as of now,
it seems that the best thing Mr. Russell can hope for is that there is
not enough evidence to convict him or that some procedural process was
violated. Either way, any drug charge is not a thing to take lightly.

If you or someone you know has been arrested or charged with possession
of a controlled substance, contact Bloom Legal at 504-599-9997 to see
what your options are and how Bloom Legal can fight on your behalf.

Truck driver busted with over 1,000 pounds of marijuana

June 23rd, 2010 | Posted in Drugs by bloom | No Comments »

Over the weekend, truck driver Nick Housinger was driving on I-12 and was pulled over by a state trooper for following his vehicle too closely.  After showing signs of nervousness, and inconsistencies with his travel agendas, the officer decided to search the truck for contraband.   Upon looking through the truck, officers found a hidden compartment, which contained 78 packages of marijuana wrapped up together.  The total weight of the 78 bundles exceeded 1,000 pounds, which is nearly $800,000 in street value.  Housinger was booked for following too close, and possession with the intent to distribute at the St. Tammany Parish Jail.

Drug Ring Busted in Jefferson Parrish

June 11th, 2010 | Posted in Drugs, Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »

Last week, the U.S. attorney’s office charged five men for taking part in the trafficking of over 200 pounds of marijuana. Through special investigations by the Drug Enforcement Agency, DEA, and help from an inside informant, a lead was found for something other than marijuana. In Gretna, agents set up a surveillance location that captured the suspicious transfer of a large bag from one vehicle to another. When officers made their arrests, they found two and a half pounds of cocaine in the bag. The two men arrested were also charged with participation in the marijuana trafficking.

The DEA was able to put away several men who were taking part in the trafficking of a portion of the illegal drugs that go through the greater New Orleans area. If you or anyone you know has been arrested for charges of drug possession or trafficking, call Bloom Legal at (504) 599-9997 for a free consultation.

Drug Testing for Welfare Recipients Moves to Senate Floor

June 9th, 2010 | Posted in Drugs, Legislation by bloom | No Comments »

The senate committee on Judiciary C has approved House Bill 617 narrowly by a 4-3 vote due to Senator Elbert Guillory (D-Opelousas) crossing party lines. The bill would mandate that 20 percent of all recipients of welfare from the Family Independence Temporary Assistance Fund be drug tested. Additionally, it would require for all persons receiving federal funds from FITAP to sign consent forms allowing for this screening. The bill, already approved by the House, now moves to the Senate floor for approval later in the week.

The bill’s sponsor, State Rep. John Abruzzo (R- Metairie), argued that the purpose of the bill is to get welfare users, especially single women, off of drugs and move them towards reentering society. “The goal is to support families and not someone’s drug habit,” argued Abruzzo.

The bill received some opposition as well. Sen. Ann Duplessis (D- New Orleans) argued vehemently against the bill claiming that the framework is already in place. Currently, the State Department of Social Services tests close to 15 percent of applicant after their initial screening. “The bill doesn’t put a program in place,” Duplessis contended. “The program is already in place.”

Furthermore, many opponents of HB 617 believe that the bill will be found unconstitutional as it most likely qualifies as an unreasonable search and seizure, thus violating the rights of the recipients of federal funding.

Drug Tax Lacks Revenue From Poor Enforcement

April 26th, 2010 | Posted in Legislation, Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »

In 1990, the Louisiana legislature instituted a tax whereby drug dealers would be required to buy tax stamps and attach them to bags of drugs or face stern penalties if they were caught without them. Louisiana’s Marijuana and Dangerous Controlled Substances Tax has suffered though from a lack of enforcement and, thus, a lack of results. The idea behind this law was to allow the state to tax gains from illicit activity while avoiding drug dealers’ right to self-incrimination. Additionally, the taxes were supposed to be so overburdening that it would also make drug dealing significantly less profitable.

From 2006-2010, Louisiana has only sold 292 stamps, while assessing $48 million in fines and collecting $126,000. Furthermore, many of the stamps purchased are believed to be by collectors and not for their intended purpose.

Many states such as Alabama, Connecticut, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Utah all have had similar tax programs with some being struck down as unconstitutional by their respective Supreme Courts. However, for some of these states, tax revenue is generated in the millions from such programs.

In Louisiana, drug dealers are supposed to pay $3.50 per gram of marijuana and $200 per gram of a dangerous controlled substance such as cocaine or heroin. The penalty carried for not having a stamp is a fine of up to $10,000 or up to 5 years in prison. Additionally, a monetary penalty can be assessed on the tax that was not paid. Louisiana Revenue Secretary Cynthia Bridges argues that too often these fines are settled for pennies on the dollar and urges that something be done especially in the tough financial times in which the state currently finds itself.

Technician Causing Turmoil In San Francisco

April 21st, 2010 | Posted in Drugs, National Issues by bloom | No Comments »

The justice system in San Francisco has taken a major blow as Deborah Madden, a 60-year-old woman and worker at the San Francisco crime lab for 29 years, has jeopardized hundreds of past convictions after being implicated in skimming cocaine from the lab. Jim Morris, former head of the lab, stated, “I don’t think we have a full grasp of the magnitude of this yet. A lot of (criminal justice) relies on trust that the lab results have been correct, but now people don’t think they are. So the whole system has been grinded to a halt.” The scandal has already resulted in the dismissal of hundreds of cases and implicates thousands more. Many expect this to start a push by prisoners to have their convictions overturned as police admit that they are legally required to disclose Ms. Madden’s conviction to defense lawyers.

Ms. Madden claims that she only snorted small amounts of cocaine that spilled at her workstation. However, she has had several personal issues in the past ranging from a domestic violence and vandalism conviction in 2008 to time in an alcohol rehabilitation center to being accused of intentionally sabotaging cases by calling in sick on days she was to testify in court. Additionally, after an internal audit, investigators discovered significant amounts of drug evidence missing in some of Ms. Madden’s cases. She explained this though saying that weight discrepancies occur frequently at the lab. Fred Tullener, a former California Department of Justice crime lab manager, describes the facility as, “A converted warehouse in the middle of nowhere on a toxic waste dump.” This, taken together, cast a dark cloud on the credibility of the search for justice in San Francisco.

Similar events to this have happened in major cities such as Detroit and Houston, resulting in millions in damages paid to those found guilty on evidence overturned and, in Detroit’s case, the lab being shut down entirely. Ralph Keaton, the executive director of the American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors, paints a grim picture for San Francisco’s future: “It’s real hard to build a good reputation and it’s very easy to destroy it. And it takes even longer to rebuild it.”

Cannizzaro Changes Means of Marijuana Prosecution

April 20th, 2010 | Posted in Courts, Drugs, Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »

On August 6, 2009, Orleans Parish District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro Jr. proposed to the New Orleans City Council to pass an ordinance that would allow for simple possession of marijuana cases to be tried in municipal court instead of Orleans Parish Criminal District Court. The changes came into effect in late March of 2010.

Cannizzaro believes that this will allow “for our resources to be better directed to dealing with more serious charges in criminal court.” Currently simple possession of marijuana charges account for one-third of the 2100 pending charges in District Criminal Court and are punishable with a fine of up to $500 or six months in prison. Cannizzaro argues that the adjustment “saves money as far as the processing of the case, (by not) having the case continuously coming back on the docket (when in criminal court), and…we’re disposing of a large number of cases very, very quickly.” 


Cannizzaro would also like to see the enforcement of simple possession offenses change as well. In this, he advocates for the New Orleans Police Department to begin issuing municipal citations for misdemeanors instead of jailing suspects. This would result in a decrease of the swelling of prison populations, as suspects would not have to be processed through Central Booking. This would also remove Criminal Courts from the proceedings entirely. Cannizzaro claims that state law allows for him to determine the course of prosecution for crimes that don’t guarantee a trial-by-jury and thus he has the power to make these changes.

The Orleans Criminal District Court argued against the shift stating that the move would cost their budget several hundreds of thousands of dollars. However, Cannizzaro believes that efficiency in the judicial system should trump the monetary needs of one office over the other.

Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office deputies stumble across methamphetamine lab and sleeping suspect

February 3rd, 2010 | Posted in Drugs, Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »


By Michelle Hunter, The Times-Picayune
February 02, 2010, 6:15PM

Authorities looking to arrest a suspect wanted for auto theft stumbled across a methamphetamine lab operating out of a Metairie apartment Saturday afternoon.

Keith Miller.jpgJPSOKeith MillerJefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office deputies evacuated the other apartments connected to Unit C at 1208 Clearview Parkway after they found lab bottles, fertilizer and the other chemicals associated with the production of methamphetamine.

They also found their suspect, Keith Miller, 27, of Metairie, fast asleep on the couch, the arrest report said. Miller was wanted by authorities for stealing his grandmother’s Chevrolet Impala on Jan. 27, according to arrest and incident reports.

Deputy Anna House received a tip that Miller and the vehicle would be at a Clearview Parkway apartment, and House called for back-up when she spotted the car in a driveway about noon, the incident report said. After knocking on the door a few times, an unidentified woman exited the apartment and told deputies Miller was inside asleep, but slumbering next to two loaded guns.

Deputies crept inside and confiscated the guns before waking Miller. That’s when deputies noticed the lab set-up and called in narcotics officers, the incident report said.

Methamphetamine, also known as “poor man’s cocaine” is a highly addictive stimulant that can be injected, swallowed, snorted or smoked. Meth labs are usually found in rural areas because of the noxious fumes created during production. The labs are also dangerous because the fumes can spark fires or explosions.

A search of the room turned up 1.6 grams of methamphetamine, and .5 grams of marijuana, in addition to Miller’s grandmother’s stolen credit cards and checks.

Miller did not live at the Clearview Parkway address. Authorities did speak to the person who rents the residence and he admitted knowing that Miller was cooking meth in the apartment, an arrest report said. The renter has not been arrested but the matter is still under investigation, according to Sgt. Larry Dyess, spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office.

Miller was taken to the Sheriff’s Office investigations bureau at 725 Maple St. in Harvey for processing and questioning. But during a moment without restraints, he escaped and fled the building, according to an arrest report. Deputies recaptured him around 6:22 p.m. in the parking lot of Marshalls clothing store, 1500 West Bank Expressway, Harvey.

Miller, of 4741 Hastings St., Metairie, was booked with creation of a clandestine lab, simple and aggravated escape, resisting police by violence, simple burglary of an inhabited dwelling, possession of stolen property less than $300, two counts of illegally carrying a weapon, auto theft, possession of stolen property greater than $500, drug possession with the intent to distribute, possession of marijuana, two counts of possession of stolen things, use of a firearm in connection with drug activity and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Miller was being held Tuesday at the Jefferson Parish Correctional Center in Gretna in lieu of $627,500 bond for the most recent charges
Michelle Hunter can be reached at mhunter@timespicayune.com or 504.883.7054.

Metairie man admits supplying co-worker’s fatal heroin

January 31st, 2010 | Posted in Courts, Drugs, Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »

By Drew Broach, The Times-Picayune
January 29, 2010, 11:45PM

A Metairie man who supplied the heroin that killed his restaurant co-worker during Carnival 2008 has pleaded guilty to federal charges of conspiracy and distributing the drug.

Matthew S. Olvany, 30, faces as much as 20 years in prison, three years’ probation and a $1 million fine, although maximum penalties are rare in federal court. In fact, he and his prosecutors, assistant U.S. attorneys Maurice Landrieu and William Quinlan Jr. signed a plea agreement calling for a 15-year prison sentence.

The final decision will be up to U.S. District Judge Mary Ann Vial Lemmon,who accepted Olvany’s guilty plea Thursday.

Zac Moser.jpgZac MoserOlvany’s stash led to the fatal overdose of Zac Moser, a Destrehan High School graduate, drummer and one of seven people ages 16 to 27 to die in New Orleans of drugs in a five-week period.

Moser, 21, and Olvany both worked at Emeril’s Delmonico restaurant. Moser had just been promoted from waiter to bartender but pulled just one shift in the new post before his death. That was Feb. 3, 2008, the night of the Super Bowl and the Bacchus parade that rolled down St. Charles Avenue in front of the restaurant.

Court records say Moser left the restaurant and traveled with three co-workers to Olvany’s house at 1201 Vegas Drive. Olvany regularly sold heroin in $50 to $100 amounts, in part to support his own heroin consumption habit, according to court records, and that night he broke up a supply in his bedroom and handed over some.

The four co-workers headed to a convenience store parking lot and ingested some of the drug, then hit a couple of bars on St. Charles Avenue not far from Delmonico. Moser ended up at one co-worker’s apartment in New Orleans and was found dead the next morning in the bathroom, a syringe, spoon and cigarette lighter near the body.

Soon FBI agents was on the case. They reviewed the calls on Moser’s cell phone and interviewed his acquaintances, and two months after his death agent James Hurley Jr. went undercover to Olvany’s house and bought a half-gram of heroin from him for $100. The FBI arrested him the next day.

Metairie man pleads guilty to dealing Ecstasy

January 29th, 2010 | Posted in Courts, Drugs, Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »

By Michelle Hunter, The Times-Picayune
January 28, 2010, 5:22PM

A Metairie man faces up to 20 years in prison after pleading guilty Thursday in federal court to dealing Ecstasy.

Lance Gassen, 24, of 2720 Independence St., appeared before U.S. District Judge Eldon Fallon and pleaded guilty to conspiracy to possess Ecstasy with the intent to distribute, possession of Ecstasy with the intent to distribute and two counts of Ecstasy distribution, according to U.S. Attorney Jim Letten’s office.

Gassen was arrested July 8 after an investigation by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. A confidential informant outfitted with surveillance equipment bought Ecstacy pills from Gassen on three occasions in June.

In addition to prison time, Gassen could be fined up to $250,000 and be ordered to serve three years of supervised released for each count. Sentencing is scheduled for May 13.

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