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<blockquote data-quote="WSM" data-source="post: 294999" data-attributes="member: 5169"><p>husband got the police report. The officer writes: "I was dispatched to an anonymous tip that a with-m juvenile named difficult child was selling white pills at summer camp. Made contact with gfgat XCY and told difficult child why I was here. difficult child removed 5 white capsule type pills from his pocket labeled 'alza 36' Concerta I later learned the pills are for ADHD. difficult child stated the pills were planted in his pocket by someone and that he didn't know where they came from. difficult child clearly appeared upset and visiblys shaken by my presence. I asked difficult child if he took medicine at home and he said 'no'. difficult child provided me a number for husband name who responded to the school. </p><p> </p><p>"Mr husband stated thate difficult child has behavior problems and attended a military school. Approximately one month ago difficult child came home from school with several unknown pills that he stated someone planted into his pants pockets. Mr husband took what difficult child had and destroyed them. I showed him the five pills difficult child had and Mr husband said they were the same pills that difficult child brought home from the military school. Mr husband states difficult child takes medication but nothing to do with ADHD. XYZ camp director asked that difficult child be removed from the school for the rest of the day. The five concerta pills were impounded receipted and placed into evidence. A juvenile transcript was completed as a not-in-custody with the recommendation of this writer that difficult child attend a diversion or civil citation program."</p><p> </p><p>A couple notes about this:</p><p> </p><p>husband said the cops told him that he didn't think difficult child did it, that they were likely planted and he should 'look' inside his own house for answers, ie, the officer did not believe difficult child did it. This is not the impression anyone gets from reading this, I don't think.</p><p> </p><p>I asked husband later if he'd told the officer about difficult child's other felonies. Of course not. So the guy made the recommendation based on the fact he saw a scared looking little 12 year old infront of him. </p><p> </p><p>Secondly, the name difficult child gave the police for his father was a diminutive of his real name. For example, if husband's name is Michael, and husband is called Mike, difficult child gave the police the name Mikey. The police refers to husband as Mikey in the report. Nobody ever calls husband by this name.</p><p> </p><p>Thirdly, husband told me that the police found the drugs in difficult child's pockets, but the report says that the police asked him about it and difficult child pulled them out of his pocket. difficult child knew they were there. difficult child apparently didn't say, "Drugs, what drugs?" Nope, he pulled them out of his pocket and gave them to the police.</p><p> </p><p>Finally, the police asked difficult child if he took medicine at home and difficult child said no. But difficult child takes drugs: lexapro and risperdal, twice a day. difficult child lied.</p><p> </p><p>So that's one update.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WSM, post: 294999, member: 5169"] husband got the police report. The officer writes: "I was dispatched to an anonymous tip that a with-m juvenile named difficult child was selling white pills at summer camp. Made contact with gfgat XCY and told difficult child why I was here. difficult child removed 5 white capsule type pills from his pocket labeled 'alza 36' Concerta I later learned the pills are for ADHD. difficult child stated the pills were planted in his pocket by someone and that he didn't know where they came from. difficult child clearly appeared upset and visiblys shaken by my presence. I asked difficult child if he took medicine at home and he said 'no'. difficult child provided me a number for husband name who responded to the school. "Mr husband stated thate difficult child has behavior problems and attended a military school. Approximately one month ago difficult child came home from school with several unknown pills that he stated someone planted into his pants pockets. Mr husband took what difficult child had and destroyed them. I showed him the five pills difficult child had and Mr husband said they were the same pills that difficult child brought home from the military school. Mr husband states difficult child takes medication but nothing to do with ADHD. XYZ camp director asked that difficult child be removed from the school for the rest of the day. The five concerta pills were impounded receipted and placed into evidence. A juvenile transcript was completed as a not-in-custody with the recommendation of this writer that difficult child attend a diversion or civil citation program." A couple notes about this: husband said the cops told him that he didn't think difficult child did it, that they were likely planted and he should 'look' inside his own house for answers, ie, the officer did not believe difficult child did it. This is not the impression anyone gets from reading this, I don't think. I asked husband later if he'd told the officer about difficult child's other felonies. Of course not. So the guy made the recommendation based on the fact he saw a scared looking little 12 year old infront of him. Secondly, the name difficult child gave the police for his father was a diminutive of his real name. For example, if husband's name is Michael, and husband is called Mike, difficult child gave the police the name Mikey. The police refers to husband as Mikey in the report. Nobody ever calls husband by this name. Thirdly, husband told me that the police found the drugs in difficult child's pockets, but the report says that the police asked him about it and difficult child pulled them out of his pocket. difficult child knew they were there. difficult child apparently didn't say, "Drugs, what drugs?" Nope, he pulled them out of his pocket and gave them to the police. Finally, the police asked difficult child if he took medicine at home and difficult child said no. But difficult child takes drugs: lexapro and risperdal, twice a day. difficult child lied. So that's one update. [/QUOTE]
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