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    July 05

    9 Arrested in Drug Related Sting Operation

    9 Arrested in Drug-Related Sting Operation


    Published: Thursday, June 11, 2009 at 11:46 p.m.
    Last Modified: Thursday, June 11, 2009 at 11:46 p.m.

    Sheriff's deputies arrested nine people in a drug-related sting Wednesday in a Lakeland gated community.

      Detectives served a search warrant at 5532 Black Hawk Lane in the Hawks Ridge subdivision

      and seized methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia, four firearms and evidence of a money counterfeiting operation, the Sheriff's Office said. Those arrested and their charges include:

      Warren Crowder, 43, of 5532 Black Hawk Lane. Charged with possession of methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia.

      James Kunkle, 54, of 5532 Black Hawk Lane. Charged with possession of a concealed firearm, possession of methamphetamine, possession of drug paraphernalia, maintaining a dwelling for drug use, and possession of counterfeit U.S. currency.

      Fancy Brown, 32, of 1645 West Oak Drive. Charged with possession of methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia.

      Justin Annis, 28, of 1645 West Oak Drive. Charged with possession of methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia.

      Chase Morton, 18, of 3835 Duff Road. Charged with possession of methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia.

      Thomas Huff, 38, of 2709 Providence Road. Charged with possession of counterfeit U.S. currency and possession of less than 20 grams of cannabis.

      Jessica Jackman, 22, of 2008 Sweet Fern Place. Charged with possession of counterfeit U.S. currency and violation of probation for petit theft.

      Stephen Weaver, 36, of 3406 Leslie Road. Charged with possession of counterfeit U.S. currency and possession of less than 20 grams of cannabis.

      Shawn Whitford, 25, of 4985 Magnolia Ave. in Mulberry. Charged with violation of probation for battery.


       


       

      New law says Florida prisoners can be shipped to other states by Steve Bousquet

      New law says Florida prisoners can be shipped to other states

      Strategy for overpopulation seen as a last resort

      Steve Bousquet

      Miami Herald Tallahassee Bureau

      2:12 AM EDT, June 8, 2009

      TALLAHASSEE

       

      Florida, famous for shipping orange juice all over the country, may yet be known for a very different kind of export: criminals.

      With the inmate population hovering around 100,000 and the state lacking money to build new prisons, the Legislature has given the corrections department the authority to ship inmates to other states for the first time.

      ''It's a safety valve,'' says the plan's sponsor, Sen. Victor Crist, a Tampa Republican who oversees prison spending. ``This is not a mandate. It's a passive safety net.''

      Crist said shipping prisoners would be considered only as a last resort to avoid the early release of inmates because of overpopulation. The cost would be agreed upon in talks with the receiving states.

      A prison bill (SB 1722) effective July 1 allows the state to ship inmates to state-run or private prisons in other states.

      The nation's largest private prison company, Corrections Corporation of America, houses prisoners from eight states, including California, and has long promoted the transfer idea in Florida, without success. Sen. Crist insists he came to this idea himself and not at the behest of the prison industry.

      CCA calls itself ''the leader in out-of-state housing'' on its website. It operates 62 prisons and has thousands of surplus beds in other states that it is eager to fill with convicted felons, and Florida has the nation's third-largest prison system.

      A year ago, CCA urged the Legislature to follow 15 other states that export inmates, calling it ''cost-effective.'' The idea went nowhere, but that was before the bottom fell out of the economy and the state budget collapsed with a $6-billion shortfall.

      ''This is not a new issue,'' said CCA's Tallahassee lobbyist, Matt Bryan. ``This just gives the state another option to deal with a potential rapid influx of new inmates.''

      Bryan noted that building a new 1,300-bed prison costs about $100 million. Next year's budget will be the first in recent memory with no money set aside for new prison construction.

      Exporting inmates may never come to pass because Florida's inmate population has stabilized in recent months and has fallen below earlier projections. In fact, a new, 3,300-bed prison in rural Suwannee County is built but not yet fully open.

      The prison population was at about 101,000 this week and the bed capacity is about 106,000. The population fluctuates daily and is constantly affected by the need to move prisoners who have special needs or for disciplinary reasons.

      UNENTHUSIASTIC

      Corrections Secretary Walt McNeil is not enthusiastic about exporting prisoners. He said it undermines the goal of reducing recidivism by encouraging inmates to build ties to the communities they will return to upon their release from prison.

      The new law requires the Department of Corrections to take into account the proximity of an inmate's family before relocating the inmate.

      One possible category of exported prisoners is illegal immigrants. As of June 2008, Florida prisons held 5,523 inmates who were undocumented immigrants in the U.S. About 60 percent were in prison for violent crimes.

      PUBLIC VS. PRIVATE

      The Florida Police Benevolent Association, a large and vocal union representing corrections officers, also opposes exporting inmates, partly because it would help the private prison industry the PBA has long opposed.

      ''Our preference would be to build public prisons and keep prisoners here in Florida,'' PBA's David Murrell said. ``When you start sending prisoners to other states, you're asking for trouble.''

      According to news reports, Idaho officials last year removed about 300 prisoners from a GEO Group-run Texas prison because of understaffing and lax supervision. In Maine, civil rights groups and inmate lawyers said a plan to ship inmates to Oklahoma was a burden to families and would increase recidivism

      Copyright © 2009, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

      Half men arrested test positive for Drugs by Donna Leinwand

      Study finds half of men arrested test positive for drugs
      By Donna Leinwand, USA TODAY
      Half of the men arrested in 10 U.S. cities test positive for some type of illegal drug, a federal study found.

      Not only do the findings show "a clear link between drugs and crime," they also highlight the need to provide drug treatment, says Gil Kerlikowske, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, which will make the data public Thursday.

      Assessing offenders for drug and mental health problems and providing treatment is "important if you want to stop recidivism and recycling people through the system," says Kerlikowske, who supports drug courts that offer court-ordered drug treatment.

      "There's an opportunity when someone is arrested to divert them to treatment if they need it," says Bill Piper, director of national affairs for the Drug Policy Alliance Network, a group that supports legalizing marijuana and treating drug use as a public health issue. "But people shouldn't have to get arrested to get treatment."

      In 2008 researchers interviewed and obtained urine samples from 3,924 men arrested in 10 metropolitan areas: Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, Denver, Indianapolis, Minneapolis, New York, Portland, Ore., Sacramento and Washington, D.C.

      In Chicago, 87% tested positive for drug use and in Sacramento, 78% tested positive. Many of the men — 40% in Chicago and 29% in Sacramento — tested positive for more than one drug.

      Marijuana is the most common drug in every city where testing was done except Atlanta, where cocaine is most prevalent, the study found.

      Methamphetamine use is concentrated on the west coast where 35% of the men arrested in Sacramento and 15% of the men arrested in Portland tested positive for the drug.

      Heroin use is highest, at 29%, among men arrested in Chicago, an increase from 20% in 2007. Heroin use among arrestees declined in Portland, from 12% in 2007 to 8% in 2008.

      Positive drug tests declined since 2007 among men arrested in Atlanta, Portland and Washington, the study found. Some of that decline can be attributed to law changes, Kerlikowske says.

      Portland passed laws restricting access to ingredients needed to make methamphetamine, Kerlikowske says.

      Cities and states need more resources for drug treatment, says Marc Mauer, executive director of The Sentencing Project, which advocates for alternatives to incarceration.

      "If you just want drug treatment, in some places you are better off getting arrested and going to drug court," Mauer says.

      "The federal resources that have gone into the drug war have been heavily oriented toward police and incarceration rather than treatment. We need to shift that use of resources," he says.

       
       
       
      Find this article at:
      http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2009-05-27-arrestees_N.htm

      Beautiful - Eminem

       

      The Prisoner - Iron Maiden

       

      Falling On - Finger Eleven

       

      Disturbed - Stricken

        

      Sulfer - Slipknot

       

      Boys of Summer - The Ataris

       

      Black Flag - Police Story

        
      June 19

      "An excerpt from the book, Inside: Life Behind Bars in America, by Michael Santos"

           "The more time I spent in the penitentiary, the more I came to believe that it is truly a culture unto itself.  It is a culture that perpetuates failure, at least as measured by free society's standards.  The penitentiary discourges the men it contains from thinking that they can become anything more than prisoners.  With congress's abolishment in the mid 1980's of the possiblity for.... parole, the pen has become a home devoid of hope for tens of thousands of desperate men.  Those men make their lives inside of it, embracing values unreconizable to most law-abiding citizens."
           by Michael Santos
       
      June 11

      Deliver Me

          "They that sit as judges speak against me;
      and I was the song of the drunkards. 
           But as for me, my prayer is unto thee,
      O Lord, in an acceptable time:  O God, in the
      multitude of they mercy hear me, in the truth
      of thy salvation.
           Deliver me out of the mire, and let me
      not sink:  let me be delivered from them that
      hate me, and out of the deep waters."
       
          - Psalm 69: 12-14 -

      She Talks to Angels - The Black Crowes

       
      June 03

      INSIDE THE MIND OF A MAD CRACKER By Chris G.

      Inside the mind of a mad cracker

      back in the belly of the beast;

      counting the days to the next month,

      counting the years till I’m released.

      What’s on my mind?  Revenge and payback.

      Trust me, my memory goes way back.

      However many years seems like yesterday,

      but then I better not say that.

      Turn on the radio and there’s that song.

      Why do they always play that?

      I’d rather just listen to the baseball game,

      chill on my bunk, and lay back.

      Sometimes I sit with head in hands;

      big ideas and bigger plans,

      but always behind me’s a huge hourglass

      and I listen to the falling sands.

       

      Hate is not the opposite of love.

      The two are so very similar.

      In fact, the farthest from the act of love

      is to show an uncaring indifference.

      I’m an imminent junkie and a great sage.

      I’m a mad cracker with great rage.

      I’ll run a thousand miles around the track

      and I’m an absolute beast in the weight cage.

      I can pack my things and be a travellin’ man;

      just a madman popping my lorazepam,

      but for now all I see is razor wire for days,

      so many fences, absurd.

      Betrayed, abandoned, estranged, deranged,

      and mad in every sense of the word.

      I still think it’s unsafe to play with snakes

      and I can smell a rat in a second flat.

      I still get in a zone and write my poems.

      You know I’m pretty good at that,

      but I still find it’s a waste of time

      yet somehow get it off my mind

      and through the pain and after the rain,

      I still hope for sunshine.

      I think these thoughts and think’ em out.

      It’s what I always think about

      and see the faces of all the ones

      who put me here up under these guns.

      I think these thoughts at the very least

      everyday until I’m released:

      inside the mind of a mad cracker

      back in the belly of the beast

          by Chris G.

      Under The Box

      Here is a link to a movie documenary on solitary confinement, striving to shut down prison control units:
       
      June 02

      The Cure - Pictures of You

       

      Machine Head - Message in a Bottle

       

      Merle Haggard - Branded Man

       

      Korn - Did My Time

       

      Simple Minds - Dont You (Forget About Me)