On 11/03/2017 I responded to Elkhorn treatment on a complaint of a whitish powder substance needing test for the possibility of it being an illegal drug. Upon arivail I spoke to staff members Kendra Rose and Mary Norris. I was given a small plastic baggie with a whitish powder in it. I tested the substance and it showed it was methamphetamine. I was told the substance was found in the property of inmate Nicole Martell. I was told Martell had just arrived to the center and when staff had searched her property they found the substance in a DVD case. Martell had not had any access to her property from June of 2017 Martell had been moved around to two other jails prior to her coming to the meth center. I contacted the Jefferson County Attorney
Police discovered that Michelle McNamara's home had a special room that held an assortment of uppers, downers, and painkillers. However, not all the pills were illegal drugs that is found on the streets or sold by dope dealers. Michelle also had prescription drugs, given to her by the doctors she went to. According to Radar Online, Michelle had “bottles of the antidepressant, Bupropion, an antibiotic called Cefdinir, and the anti-inflammatory drug Naproxen.
Facts: This case consists of Hereford a criminal informant who gets information of narcotic laws to Officer Marsh; a federal narcotic agent with 29 years on the job. Hereford had been feeding Marsh information for close to 6 months and that information was accurate and reliable. In the early days of September 1956, Hereford told Officer Marsh that the defendant James Draper was distributing illegal narcotics throughout Denver. Several days later, Hereford told Marsh that in the days before Draper went to Chicago and set to return with several ounces of heroin. Along with the information given Hereford gave a physical description of Draper, which included his age, weight, race, and clothes that he had
Wheetley also noticed that a can of beer was sitting in the vehicle's cup holder. Wheetley asked Harris for consent to search his vehicle. When Harris denied contest, Wheetley retrieved his drug-detection dog Aldo from his patrol car. Wheetley walked Aldo around Harris’s truck for a “free air sniff”, and Aldo alerted on the vehicle’s driver-side door handle. From the demeanor of Aldo’s behavior, Wheetley believed that he had probable cause to search the vehicle. Wheatley's search did not result in any drugs that Aldo was trained in detecting, but the search did result in the finding of materials used to make methamphetamine. These materials included two hundred pseudoephedrine pills, eight thousand matches, a
As per policy, I searched the backpack to ensure that there were no items which
“During the investigation, officers recovered more than 20 firearms, over 40 grams of crack cocaine, more than 100 grams of powder cocaine, marijuana, ecstasy pills, and nearly $2,500” (United States Attorney’s Office).
Evidence of Mr Thomas’ involvement in the sale of illegal drugs were being monitored by undercover police. Then, on 8 January 2015, a search warrant enabled police to enter Mr Thomas’ premises in which they found a glass pipe, scales, $1000 in cash, a mobile phone, small Ziploc bags and the drug, crystal methamphetamine. All these instruments indicated Mr Thomas was a supplier and user of the dangerous and illegal drug.
According to the probable cause statement filed on September 26, 2016, by Chesapeake Police Officer Allison Ostman, the following occurred in the city of Chesapeake: “On September 18, 2016, at approximately 03:30, I made contact with a suspicious occupied vehicle at the intersection of Drum Creek Road and Taylor Road that was occupied by several juveniles to include a Mr. Darren DelPapa. Due to an odor of marijuana in the vehicle, I performed a search of the vehicle for illegal narcotics. During my search, I located a plastic bag containing (1) 30 mg tablet of codeine underneath Mr. DelPapa’s seat. I mirandized him at approximately 0348 hours, to which Mr. DelPapa stated the pill belonged to him.”
On Sunday, September 6, 2015, at about 1:07 AM, Ofc. Katsma and I were dispatched to North Scott Hall to investigate the report of a male checking in at security station with an odor of marijuana on him. This was reported to the department via telephone by Community Advisor (CA) Ashlynn Schreiner, who was working at the security station.
During the search, investigators found more than 60 grams of marijuana, some of which was packaged for sale; several pills, yet to be identified, with lab analysis pending; baggies; scales; and 27.5 grams of crystal meth, also packaged for sale. They also seized $1,500 cash and a .22-caliber rifle, according to Mullet.
On 02 March 2017, 1258 Hrs, Michael Goodman DOB:03/02/1992, was arrested by Corporal Kyle Wilmont of the Missouri State Highway Patrol for possession of a controlled substance. He was transported to Dent County Jail and placed on a 24 hour pending issuance of warrants. See his report number 170128387, for further details involving that arrest.
On Friday, November 20, 2015, Investigator Clyde Wheat and I met with Nursing Manger John Wagoner and Lead Charger Nurse Rachel Tarpley on Division 8900, in regards to medication missing from the narcotic lockbox, located inside the 8900 Oncology Pyxis West Room. Wagoner stated the medication was stored in the lockbox Monday, September 21, 2015, at approximately 2345 hours. The medication belonged to Patient Ieremia Fualau. The medication contained approximately sixteen (16) Oxycodone and (17) OxyContin.
The victim was court ordered to be admitted at the Specialized Treatment Facility by Harrison County Youth Court on 04/27/16; he will be admitted for six months and the expected discharge date is 10/27/16. The reporter stated John was has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, ADHD, marijuana abuse, mood disorder, severe mood swings, disruptive behavior, border line dyslectual disorder, basic personality disorder, mental incompetance; John is unable to function on his age level and has a very low IQ; John is unable to read, write, and count. Mr. Young stated John will never be able to live on his own and will always need assistance. During a session with John on 04/28/16, he disclosed that his father punched him in the face but that the details
This is a Level 3 Unit which means that bullet pointing you answer is only acceptable when stated. All other answers need to be detailed and in a narrative format.The sizes of the boxes are not indicative of the size of your answer required to meet the national standards. Keep the formatting consistent with the original document. This helps to demonstrate your IT skills.Use spell check on your computer and check your grammar. This will provide evidence for your level 2 literacy which is recommended for a Level 3 award.
Good morning, everyone. I am Patricia Simmons, the CEO of Matterhorn Health. Thank you for coming to this press conference today. As we know Matterhorn Health was receiving some trouble reports a few months ago from doctors and patients related to unexpected high inaccuracy rate on our new device, GlucoGauge blood glucose monitor. Those reports revealed the blood glucose levels which more than expected results. This inaccuracy rate was up to 30% in the “hypo” zone, or zone of blood glucose readings from 40 – 80 mg/dL. The FDA regulates the inaccuracy rate should not exceed 20% while American Diabetes Association allows the inaccuracy rate should not exceed 10%. Given the inaccuracy rate on our pre-release field testing was only 10%, we take this problem very seriously to make sure our customers,
Officer Isett seized the pan and observed that there were dried mushrooms in a plastic baggy in the pan along with some smoking pipes. The mushrooms appeared to be Psilocybin type mushrooms (commonly called magic mushrooms, or shrooms). DOC is authorized to search a residence, which a supervised subject is living in, and Tracy is a WA DOC supervised subject. Grewell is being supervised by Jefferson County District Court.