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Marijuana Kills

the original article made it sound like she was just a casual user who only chose to smoke a doob at concerts and what not.

yeah...

somewhere along the line, rachel went from casual user to dealer. she was either getting too big/greedy, too sloppy, or she decided to sell to other women (who eventually sold her out), because the police executed a search warrant on her apartment.

i bet she was a total fucking bad ass, too...especially in her own mind. i mean, after all, she was a 'drug dealer' who was moving 'serious weight'.

yeah, good job.
 
Rachel Hoffman was a friend of mine in Tallahassee. Local cops were so crooked they refused to let her talk to a lawyer and made her meet two cocaine and gun dealers who she had never met before. She was the most innocent looking girl and the two knew it was a setup. The two guys changed the buy location at the last minute and cops had no idea where she was. They murdered her and afterwards cop tried to cover it up. F*cking Tallahassee pigs. Her parents are on the warpath and are going to crucify local law enforcement.
 
Hmm, the article did indeed create the impression she was just a casual user with an amount for personal usage (read; I didn't bother reading it all).

Glad there's one less Pablo Escobar on the streets now though!!1
 
did she sell drugs to you? she was obviously selling to someone...why else would they have executed a search warrant on her apartment?
 
jboy45 said:
Rachel Hoffman was a friend of mine in Tallahassee. Local cops were so crooked they refused to let her talk to a lawyer and made her meet two cocaine and gun dealers who she had never met before. She was the most innocent looking girl and the two knew it was a setup. The two guys changed the buy location at the last minute and cops had no idea where she was. They murdered her and afterwards cop tried to cover it up. F*cking Tallahassee pigs. Her parents are on the warpath and are going to crucify local law enforcement.


yeeeah..
 
p0ink said:
did she sell drugs to you? she was obviously selling to someone...why else would they have executed a search warrant on her apartment?

lol @ police only executing valid warrants
 
enigma4dub said:
lol @ police only executing valid warrants

oh, sweet then. if it wasn't a a valid search warrant all of her charges would get tossed out.

oh wait, she didn't let it go that way...
 
p0ink said:
oh, sweet then. if it wasn't a a valid search warrant all of her charges would get tossed out.

oh wait, she didn't let it go that way...

no excuses for her, but she could have been blazing in her apartment. a neighbor calls, they dig around in her trash and boom warrant.
 
Lestat said:
The Killing of Rachel Hoffman and the Tragedy That Is Pot Prohibition
By Paul Armentano, AlterNet
Posted on July 29, 2008, Printed on July 29, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/93082/

Rachel Hoffman is dead. Rachel Hoffman, like many young adults, occasionally smoked marijuana.

But Rachel Hoffman is not dead as a result of smoking marijuana; she is dead as a result of marijuana prohibition.

Under prohibition, Rachel faced up to five years in a Florida prison for possessing a small amount of marijuana. (Under state law, violators face up to a $5,000 fine and five years in prison for possession of more than 20 grams of pot.)

Under prohibition, the police in Rachel's community viewed the 23-year-old recent college graduate as nothing more than a criminal and threatened her with jail time unless she cooperated with them as an untrained, unsupervised confidential informant. Her assignment: Meet with two men she'd never met and purchase a large quantity of cocaine, ecstasy and a handgun. Rachel rendezvoused with the two men; they shot and killed her.

Under prohibition, the law enforcement officers responsible for brazenly and arrogantly placing Rachel in harm's way have failed to publicly express any remorse -- because, after all, under prohibition Rachel Hoffman was no longer a human being deserving of such sympathies.

Speaking on camera to ABC News' "20/20" last week, Tallahassee Police Chief Dennis Jones attempted to justify his department's callous and irresponsible behavior, stating, "My job as a police chief is to find these criminals in our community and to take them off the streets (and) to make the proper arrest."

But in Rachel Hoffman's case, she was not taken "off the streets," and police made no such arrest -- probably because, deep down, even they know that people like Rachel pose no imminent threat to the public. Instead, the officers on the scene secretly cut a deal with Rachel: They told her that they would not file charges if she agreed to go undercover.

Rachel became the bait; the Tallahassee police force went trolling for sharks.

In the weeks preceding Rachel's murder, police told her to remain tight-lipped about their backroom agreement -- and with good reason. The cops' on-the-spot deal with Rachel flagrantly violated Tallahassee Police Department protocol, which mandated that such an arrangement must first gain formal approval from the state prosecutor's office. Knowing that the office would likely not sign off on their deal -- Rachel was already enrolled in a drug court program from a prior pot possession charge, and cooperating with the TPD as a drug informant would be in violation of her probation -- the police simply decided to move forward with their informal arrangement and not tell anybody.

"(In) hindsight, would it have been a good idea to let the state attorney know? Yes," Jones feebly told "20/20." Damn right it would have been; Rachel Hoffman would still be alive.

But don't expect Jones or any of the other officers who violated the department's code of conduct -- violations that resulted in the death of another human being -- to face repercussions for their actions. Obeying the rules is merely "a good idea" for those assigned with enforcing them. On the other hand, for people like Rachel, violating those rules can be a death sentence.

Of course, to those of us who work in marijuana law reform, we witness firsthand every day the adverse consequences wrought by marijuana prohibition -- a policy that has led to the arrest of nearly 10 million young people since 1990. To us, the sad tale of Rachel Hoffman marks neither the beginning nor the end of our ongoing efforts to bring needed "reefer sanity" to America's criminal justice system. It is simply another chapter in the ongoing and tragic saga that is marijuana prohibition.

Many people who work in Tallahassee live none around the city. You should see what happens in the morning there. It's like a mass population gain and after work it's a mass exodus. Many people avoid the city due to run-ins with the police. They have high pull-over and ticketing practices. Stupid shit like left turns on yellow , they pull over commonly. These people are majorly over zealous IMHO.

I'm not surprised their actions have gotten people killed
 
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