“Candy Crush” BREAKS the law!



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21 Comments

  1. There is, in fact a schedule 6 in Tennessee statutes…
    "Tennessee Code Title 39. Criminal Offenses § 39-17-417
    (g)(1) A violation of subsection (a) with respect to a Schedule VI controlled substance classified as marijuana containing not less than one-half ( 1/2 ) ounce (14.175 grams) nor more than ten pounds (10 lbs.) (4535 grams) of marijuana, or a Schedule VI controlled substance defined as a non-leafy, resinous material containing tetrahydrocannabinol (hashish), containing not more than two pounds (2 lbs.) (905 grams) of hashish is a Class E felony and, in addition, may be fined not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000).

    (2) A violation of subsection (a) with respect to a Schedule VI controlled substance classified as marijuana and containing not less than ten pounds (10 lbs.), one gram (4536 grams) of marijuana nor more than seventy pounds (70 lbs.) (31,696 grams) of marijuana, or a Schedule VI controlled substance defined as a non-leafy, resinous material containing tetrahydrocannabinol (hashish) and containing not less than two pounds (2 lbs.), one gram (906 grams) nor more than four pounds (4 lbs.) (1810 grams) of hashish, or a Schedule VI controlled substance classified as marijuana consisting of not less than ten (10) marijuana plants nor more than nineteen (19) marijuana plants, regardless of weight, is a Class D felony and, in addition, may be fined not more than fifty thousand dollars ($50,000).

    (3) A violation of subsection (a) with respect to a Schedule VI controlled substance defined as a non-leafy, resinous material containing tetrahydrocannabinol (hashish) and containing not less than four pounds (4 lbs.), one gram (1811 grams) nor more than eight pounds (8 lbs.) (3620 grams) of hashish, or a Schedule VI controlled substance classified as marijuana consisting of not less than twenty (20) marijuana plants nor more than ninety-nine (99) marijuana plants, regardless of weight, is a Class C felony and, in addition, may be fined not more than one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000)."

    The more you know, the smarter you become…unless your a drug testing laboratory in Tennessee! LOL 🤣

  2. My Question, If at trial the Prosecutors are found guilty of the civil rights violations, can they then be charged with Criminal violations? Will they be subject to Bar disciplinary sanctions.

  3. IS amazon allowing CBD sales? I haven't been able to find it there.
    On a related, some Kratom retailers DO "enhance" products prior to sale. You can get the active ingredient — mitrogyna resins in spray form. So open up your bag containing thousands of gelcaps, spry more chocolatey goodness on them, and increse the price.
    It's not illegal as such, as long as they're transparent about it. Getting tighter regulation on this would require actually treating Kratom as a food supplement (rather htna as a research substance not for human consumption).
    If it can't be used as a dietary component, then tampering with it can't make people sick, right?
    (I'm pro- CBD and pro-Kratom, fwiw).

  4. So back in the day, the military started using two-word operation names where words would be chosen because they had no connection to each other, in order to eliminate any information about the operation being ascertainable from the code name.

    "Market Garden" is an example — a miilitary operation in teh Netherlands in WW2.
    But politicians can't resist things like "DESERT STORM" and shit, so the perfectly reasonable op-sec-positive rule of selecting random words has fallen by the wayside.
    How could a drug operation called "Candy Crush" NOT go wrong?

  5. I remember hearing about this when it happened and was completely dumbfounded home how the police and prosecutors thought they were going to get away with this. Hopefully they will pay for their ignorance! Or better yet the Tennessee taxpayers will pay.

  6. This evidence could be used for those that have been arrested through those notorious field drug test kits officers use. They're wrong more than they're right and officers should know this.

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