Wa doubles fines for selling smokes to kids

Wa doubles fines for selling smokes to kids

-Plea from police after officers find 15lbs of cannabis inside two houses

-Marijuana confiscated at local church to be destroyed, court hea?????rd

-Lawyer who helped with illegal weed sale charges charged

-LAPD arrests eight for drug dealing at party

-Plea and money from joint deal with boy gets sentenced for drugs offence

-New Hampshire man charged with dealing marijuana and pot in town to 12-year-old girl

-Girl pleads guilty in second case of marijuana possession

-Lawy?????er from pot busts finds marijuana inside car

-Parents of 10 pot smokers and two pot smokers charged

-Jail in charge’s daughter pleads guilty in second pot possession

-Dealing to sell weed: Woman caught selling her parents 10 joints in town

A woman arrested by police for selling marijuana to a 12-year-old girl was given a two-year jail term Wednesday for marijuana trafficking.

The case against 27-year-old Kimberly Jones was scheduled to go to trial Wednesday night.

On Aug. 20, police responded to complaints of an underage drinking in the 4200 block of East Walnut Street in Brunswick. When officers approached the home they discovered the teen living in her bedroom with “four joints, a roll of condoms and a glass of milk,” according to a news release from the Essex Count??????y Prosecutor’s Office.

Officers checked the apartment to determine the youth was 15 years old.

During their search of the home, authorities found three joints, two rolls of condoms and a glass of milk in the mother’s bedroom, authorities said.

She was charged with distribution of marijuana and possession of an ounce or less of marijuana in a public place.

According to court records, after Jones was arrested, an investigation ensued of a possible deal between her and a 16-year-old boy. According to a criminal complaint filed against her by the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, Jones was offering to trade the youth for the 15 pounds of marijuana she was arrested for.

A warrant was issued for Jones’s arrest, but on Feb. 3, when an Essex County judge denied her request for a bond hearing, she agreed to plead guilty to a charge of selling marijuana and possession of a controlled substance.

The sentence is not an option for Jones, said her attorney, Brian Wray.

“It’s just too much trouble for this person,” Wray said. “She’

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