Invasões do Dispensary do LA do protesto dos pacientes
Janeiro 29o, 2007 perto Alex
Com Invasões do dispensary do LA ainda fresco na memória, eu podia encontrar um photoset dos protestos que seguiram.
Os pacientes médicos do marijuana trouxeram sinais e frascos do pill ao edifício federal da baixa em segunda-feira, janeiro 22o. Mesmo os oficiais ocidentais de Hollywood, onde a maioria das invasões ocorreu, foram decepcionados que o DEA escolheu executar diretamente autorizações da busca em vez do contato elas.
Mais de 500 povos demonstraram fora do edifício federal e andaram mais tarde à cidade salão para agradecer assim distante o mayor para sua sustentação de direitas dos pacientes. Vamos esperar que o protesto tenha um efeito durável e desanime o DEA de fazer uma visita do repeat em qualquer altura que logo.
Dois mais pics após o salto.
Aftermath: Invasões do Dispensary de Los Angeles DEA
Janeiro 22o, 2007 perto Alex
Tantos como povos na Los Angeles estão cientes, o DEA invadiram 11 dispensaries de Los Angeles em quarta-feira, janeiro 17o. Apesar destas cooperativas que são legais em Califórnia sob Ato Compassionate do uso de 1996, não são lei federal inferior legal. Isto cría um balanço dos esforços entre gaiolas para permanecer aberto e o DEA para fechá-los para baixo.
Como exatamente o DEA escolhe é vítimas é ainda um mistério. Talvez vão após dispensaries com uma base demasiado grande do cliente, talvez infiltrate todos os dispensaries e invadem esses que acreditam estão quebrando a lei. Nós apenas não sabemos. Um paciente anonymous que andasse em um dispensary durante as invasões teve este a dizer:
Eu fui por carvalhos de H.I.P Sherman. Zumbiram-me dentro e eu fui cumprimentado por um agente federal. Era completamente ENGRENAGEM, máscara freaking e tudo. Disse-me que eu poderia girar ao redor e para sair dentro ou vir e os juntar, o que pensam eu. Isto suga…
Após falar com um dos dispensaries invadidos, eu aprendi que o DEA os aprovou para continuar vendendo o marijuana médico. O prendedor é que não podem vender a mistura, as tubulações ou as partes. Os olhares como o DEA acreditam que apenas a planta é boa bastante e todos os acréscimos como edibles, mistura e outra não são parte do negócio.
Os Dispensaries estão fazendo exame agora de etapas para aumentar suas medidas de segurança. Na camionete Nuys, uma gaiola tem beefed acima da segurança com 2 protetores armados a tempo completo. Outros efeitos das invasões são marijuana aumentado que fixa o preço através da placa. O prêmio está indo agora para até $85 um 1/8th while regs are hovering around the $60 - $65 mark. This is going to make it much harder for patients to afford their medicine.
Overall, these raids have delivered a serious blow to the Los Angeles medical marijuana community. I expect it will take at least a few months for everything to return to normal. In the meantime, let’s hope that attitudes and laws continue to progress so that this doesn’t happen again.
Read on to see more pictures from the DEA raids…
DEA: 2006 - A Year in Pictures
January 3rd, 2007 by Tim
“Not for Hide & Go Seek.”

“That tickles!”
With the New Year already upon us, plenty of organizations are looking back to the year of 2006. One of those organizations (that we especially like to keep tabs on) is the DEA.
They have just released ‘The Year in Pictures 2006‘ and it gives some pretty interesting views into the many different areas of drug trafficking.
From Tickle-Me-Elmo’s to homemade submarines, the DEA encounters strange happenings on a consistent basis.
[via Crime Sift]
Flickr User: DEA Man
December 23rd, 2006 by Alex


Here’s some photos from a Flickr user called DEA Man.
His user profile says, “DEA Superman, keeping drugs out of our high schools… you’re welcome.” I guess a thanks is in order?
Above are some choice photos of pot that was confiscated from a Hawaiian medical marijuana clinic.
Or, you can check out his photo sets - here, here and here.
MarijuanaBusiness.com
December 12th, 2006 by Alex
Is this a future Fortune 500 CEO?
Even though it’s guaranteed to make you a local celebrity, landing in the tFS Arrests section isn’t as fun as it sounds. Everyone knows growing pot can be one dangerous occupation. Still, with the risk comes the profit, and that will always attract people to try their hand at cultivating weed.
MarijuanaBusiness.com, if you believe everything written on their site, is a company dedicated to teaching people how to grow & sell marijuana. They’ll also instruct you how to avoid getting arrested, hide your money from the IRS and do plenty of other things that will really piss off the US government.
Let’s check out some choice items from the ‘Table of Contents’:
- Step-by-step plans to starting a marijuana business
- How to establish grower/dealer relationships
- Local and federal POLICE/FBI/DEA investigation tactics
- How and where to set-up a distribution network
- How to hide your new found profits and make them work for you
- Liberal schools that are dealer friendly
- Conversations that will help you initiate a sale
Basically, this is a guide on how not to become a law-abiding citizen. If all the 42+ topics covered in the Table of Contents are accurate, MarijuanaBusiness.com might actually be one of the best available sources for a home grown pot business.
One downside is how unbelievably shady that guy on the cover of the CD looks. Also, their website fits into all the usual stoner cliches with weed green coloring and a tiled, marijuana background image.
Overall, this site only leaves me with one unanswered question - does MarijuanaBusiness.com have a chapter on how to avoid the FBI/DEA tracking who purchases their CD’s online? Let’s hope so, because that’s data someone from Uncle Sam will be very interested in seeing.
Whosarat.com - Informant Database
December 1st, 2006 by Alex
Mr. Orange was the ultimate rat.
Are you a paranoid drug dealer or perhaps a syndicated crime member? Worried that the guy next to you might be giving info to the feds? Well, I have the product for you. It’s called whosarat.com and it’s a website that allows you to access information about people who are undercover agents or suspected witnesses for the prosecution.
Here’s a pretty amazing quote from the site’s so-called spokesperson:
If people got hurt or killed, it’s kind of on them. They knew the dangers of becoming an informant. We’d feel bad, don’t get me wrong, but things happen to people. If they decide to become an informant, with or without the Web site, that’s a possibility.
Wow, sounds like a lot of deep thought and legal research went into that statement. The ‘kind of on them’ defense is almost as impenetrable as the Chewbacca Defense.
The site was started in 2004 by a Boston DJ named Sean Bucci. At first it was free, but now charges people a small fee to become a member. It is responsible for blowing the cover of atleast 1 documented undercover DEA agent and probably responsible for countless more false assertions.
Interestingly enough, while doing some research, it appears the site gets re-directed to a suspended landing page. Looks like law enforcement officials might have finally won the battle to take the site down after all.
Update 12-3-06: The website is up and working properly.
[via CrimeSift]
Mississippi Drug Ring Busted by DEA
November 23rd, 2006 by Alex

In Mississippi, a large and extremely sophisticated drug ring has been busted by the DEA. Spanning from Mexico to Texas to Mississippi, Operation Central Hub made some concrete headway in linking Mexican cartels to legitimate, local business leaders in the Hattiesburg and Jackson areas.
So, what’s the score on this bust? Try $15 million in drugs and another $2.9 million in cash / assets. Not exactly the neighborhood dealer sellings grams to all the college kids. Every arrest was a result of nearly 2 years of coordinated work between multiple government agencies.
DEA Assistant Special Agent in Charge Stephen Luzinski had this to say about the operation:
Operation Central Hub targeted and successfully dismantled one of the largest drug trafficking operations ever known to operate in the State of Mississippi. It was especially significant in that agents were able to successfully trace the movement of both drugs and money from the hands of high level Mississippi traffickers into the hands of some of Mexico’s most powerful drug traffickers.
Not bad at all. The drugs were trafficked using either 18-wheelers or specially converted gooseneck trailers (pictured above). The trailers have a custom hydraulics system that lowers and raises the trailer bed, revealing thousands of pounds of narcotics.
Multiple indictments were handed out as a result of the investigation - criminal forfeiture of drug related assets, possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance and conspiracy to distribute a controlled substance. In other words, an all included, paid vacation at the nearest federal prison is in many guys’ futures.
Genius Calls 911 After DEA Confiscates Stash
November 21st, 2006 by Alex
It’s a well known fact that marijuana use is the most freely tolerated in San Francisco and its surrounding areas. They have a liberal mayor and supportive government. Well, those things can only take you so far when the big, bad federal watchdogs are around.
This one is almost too funny to be true, but some unlucky son of a bitch in San Francisco got a seriously raw deal. Walking near the Philip Burton Federal Building around 1PM, a 20 year old, un-identified man was carrying his baby - a box filled with 1.5 pounds of herb and 12 ounces of hash - to the local marijuana co-op. His plan was to sell the greenage for $4,000 a pound and use it to fund a snowboarding trip to Tahoe. Unfortunately, he never got that far.
DEA agents, also near the federal building, were going to lunch when they smelled the un-mistakable stank of buddha. Seeing this man carrying a box with a well known hydroponics logo on it, they asked him to show its contents. Figuring this was San Francisco, and everyone smoked, he showed them the greenery. Big mistake. The DEA agents flashed their badges and confiscated his crop. It wasn’t enough marijuana to prosecute under federal law, but the government still considers it contraband, so it was taken anyway.
Most people would curse their luck and go home, but not this dude. He followed the DEA agents back to the federal building and tried to go in through the employee entrance. When he finally got the picture that he wasn’t getting his herb back, he called 911 and tried to convince the police to come out and get it back for him. Which, of course, they didn’t do.
Sucks to be that guy. But, maybe this has taught him to be a little more low-profile with his crop in the future.
[via ContraCostaTimes]



















