Florida Man Facing Drug Charges After Falling Asleep At Gas Pump 

Wow! Talk about going to sleep in the getaway car! 

A Florida man fell asleep at the gas pump along with his dope & a loaded gun. 

All that “trapping” must have been exhausting because when he awoke from his power nap, he was being hauled off to jail. 

Well damn! –This guy has nobody to blame but himself and I’m sure he’s pissed–at himself!

Peep the story.

Join the discussion. 
  
WOFL Fox 35– A man found asleep behind the wheel of a running car that was parked by some gas station pumps has been arrested. Marvin Williams faces multiple charges after Orlando police officers said he passed out at a Pine Hills 7-Eleven inside a car containing 1,974 grams of cannabis and 15.5 grams of cocaine. 

According to an attendant at the store, the car had been parked by the pump for two hours. When he walked outside and knocked on the window, the driver did not wake up or respond to the knocks, so he notified police.

Officers arrived and found Williams asleep, with his foot on the brake. They also observed a bottle of cinnamon whiskey in the cup holder near the middle console and a loaded gun on the front, passenger seat. After they were able to wake Williams, they noted the smell of alcohol on his breath. “The defendant woke up and stated that he did not where he was, and he was on his way to the gym,” read a statement from one of the officers in an arrest report.

Williams was detained for openly carrying a firearm that was visible in plain view. Officers then searched the car and discovered a Crown Royal bag which they said contained five sandwich bags filled with cannabis and one bag filled with cocaine. Investigators said a scale was located inside the middle console and additional bags of cannabis were discovered between the back seat and the trunk. A further search of the car yielded loose ammunition that was inside a sock and $2,740 in cash.

Williams was arrested and transported to the Orange County Jail without incident.

3 Bodies Recovered Following Dudus Coke Manhunt Belonged To Women

  
A number of the 73 bodies recovered in West Kingston resulting from the operation to apprehend Christopher ‘Dudus’ Coke were those of men convicted of one crime or another. Superintendent Gladys ‎Brown Ellis testified in the Tivoli Enquiry that these bodies were identified by criminal records.

‎The superintendent testified that the body of a man believed to be a sniper was ‎recovered from a roof
Evidence had been given in the enquiry that up to 300 gunmen were in Tivoli Gardens in May 2010 to defend Coke who was wanted in the US at the time on drugs and gunrunning charges.

Brown Ellis testified also that three of the bodies recovered belonged to women she identified as Gloria Smith, Petrina Edwards and Carlene McKenzie.

“I came to know these women like sisters; I was with them so long,” said Brown Ellis, referring to the forensic processing and identification process.

Source | Jamaica Observer 

Italy Considers Conjugal Visits For Inmates

  

Prisoners in Italy could soon have a legal right to six to 24 hours of love making each month. The Italian parliament was scheduled to debate a “right to intimacy” bill Wednesday that would allow once-a-month conjugal visits from spouses, partners and acquaintances.

The Italian law, should it pass, would create “love rooms” for prisoners to spend time with their visitor without video or audio surveillance, according to the Local. Hearings for consideration of the bill will include testimony from inmates from a maximum security prison and their partners. They were expected to tell lawmakers about their experience having a relationship with another person when separated by bars.

A law of this sort would allow Italy to join much of the rest of Europe in that regard. Germany, Denmark and Spain all allow inmates to get together with loved ones every six to eight weeks. Those prisoners are given private rooms, condoms and bathing amenities.

Conjugal visits aren’t the norm everywhere. In the United States, extended visits are offered in only four states: California, Connecticut, New York and Washington, according to the Marshall Project. Federal prisons do not allow private visits. States have been slowly revoking the right. Last April, New Mexico suspended the privilege when it was discovered that a convicted killer had fathered four children as a result of the visits.

Read more of the article on Trove