welcome to the stone age

Posted by: fish4brains

welcome to the stone age - 05/20/14 10:19 PM


Teen could face life after cops find pot brownies
Associated Press
4 hours ago

ROUND ROCK, Texas (AP) — A 19-year-old Texas man accused of making and selling brownies laced with marijuana and hash oil faces a felony charge that carries a punishment of anywhere from five years to life in prison.

According to Round Rock police, officers found 1.5 pounds of brownies, along with a pound of marijuana, digital scales, $1,675 in cash and dozens of baggies with marijuana and hash oil at Jacob Lavoro's apartment last month. Police were responding to a complaint about marijuana use.

Lavoro was arrested but is out of jail on a $30,000 surety bond.

His father, Joe Lavoro, said he was shocked at how much prison time his son could face.

"It's outrageous, it's crazy! I don't understand it," the father told Austin TV station KEYE.

"Five years to life?" he continued. "I'm sorry, I'm a law-abiding citizen. I'm a conservative. I love my country. I'm a Vietnam veteran, but ... this is wrong!"

However, the prosecutor who is handling noted that sentences can vary depending on aggravating factors and other considerations, and that a plea deal is always possible.

"First-time offenders are treated differently. As far as I know, he is a first offender," Williamson County prosecutor Travis McDonald told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

McDonald noted that possessing 4 grams of hash oil is enough for a first-degree felony charge. According to an affidavit filed with the court, Jacob Lavoro had 145 grams of hash oil, in addition to the brownies.

Hash oil is a controlled substance that carries much harsher state penalties than marijuana. The oil has higher concentrations of THC, the psychoactive component of marijuana. It's in a penalty group with amphetamines and ecstasy.

Also, because Lavoro used hash oil, prosecutors can aggregate the weight of the brownies and charge him with manufacturing and distribution of 1.5 pounds of that category of controlled substances, McDonald said.

That means, for example, that "if you dissolve cocaine into a coke, technically you could charge him with the weight of the coke," McDonald said. However, he added, "I don't think I would."

Lavoro's lawyer, Jack Holmes, told KEYE the first-degree offense should be changed to a misdemeanor. Calls the AP made to his office Tuesday went unanswered.
Posted by: cruzn99

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/20/14 10:30 PM

inexcusable use of the law.
Posted by: blackmouth

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/20/14 10:43 PM

While the accused seems to have failed to exercise good judgement, I'm hoping that the prosecution will not fail to do so.
Posted by: Illahee

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/21/14 12:17 AM

If God wanted to give the world an enema, he's stick in Texas.
Posted by: Jason Beezuz

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/21/14 06:29 PM

Originally Posted By: Illahee
If God wanted to give the world an enema, he's stick in Texas.


Remember those epic floods a few years back down there? One place got Iike 18" in a day. I was thinking about biblical stories when I heard the news coverage. Seemed like maybe someone upstairs was throwing their weight around.
Posted by: cruzn99

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/21/14 10:02 PM

Norcal arguably has better fishing then WA now.
Posted by: Illahee

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/22/14 09:07 PM

I suggest they travel to Beeville and Kingsville.
Posted by: cruzn99

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/22/14 09:10 PM

guarantee I have been in more of texas and all of the us then all of PP combined.
Posted by: blackmouth

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/22/14 10:21 PM

You're all free to pick your poison, but Texas can't be all bad.
Posted by: Dan S.

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/22/14 10:55 PM

Sure it can.
Posted by: Dave Vedder

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/22/14 11:43 PM

Originally Posted By: cruzn99
guarantee I have been in more of texas and all of the us then all of PP combined.


My condolences.
Posted by: cruzn99

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/22/14 11:46 PM

still the best country on earth smile
Posted by: blackmouth

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/23/14 12:35 AM

Amen
Posted by: GutZ

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/23/14 12:12 PM

If you were arrested in Washington with that much Hash Oil , what we be the potential penalty? 420 months? More?
Posted by: cruzn99

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/23/14 07:06 PM

Originally Posted By: Dave Vedder
Originally Posted By: cruzn99
guarantee I have been in more of texas and all of the us then all of PP combined.


My condolences.


your condolences are unwanted, especially this weekend.
Posted by: Dave Vedder

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/23/14 07:14 PM

Cruzn

Sorry I only saw the Texas part the first time I read your post. But for that my condolances stand.
Posted by: cruzn99

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/23/14 07:18 PM

my bad then Mr. Vedder, thought you lumped in the US. You are right. Texas can be good but mostly bad. Odessa and Midland is rich with oil for years to come but is really the worst places I have seen in the entire country.
Posted by: blackmouth

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/23/14 10:47 PM

Have you been to Crains Detroit, South side Chicago-Chatham area, or Washington D.C.

I can't imagine any part of Texas that I would feel less safe in than any of the aforementioned locals.

Except, perhaps, the border areas.
Posted by: Dan S.

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/23/14 11:42 PM

There are parts of Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio that are exactly like those areas you mentioned in Detroit, Chicago and DC. It used to be called the slum, and you only have to go as far as the central district in Seattle to find one, and you can find one in any large American city. Walk around there, and you might not make it out.
Posted by: blackmouth

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/24/14 12:59 AM

Originally Posted By: Dan S.
There are parts of Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio that are exactly like those areas you mentioned in Detroit, Chicago and DC. It used to be called the slum, and you only have to go as far as the central district in Seattle to find one, and you can find one in any large American city. Walk around there, and you might not make it out.



[CAUTION YOU ARE ENTERING THE ZONE OF SUBTERFUGE]

I would have thought that you might know better than that. Dan.

As for myself, I would give more faith to any local governance than being governed by the FED'S.
Posted by: Dan S.

Re: welcome to the stone age - 05/24/14 12:08 PM

I have no idea what you just said. smile