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Barry Cooper (born May 21, 1969) is an American drug reform activist, YouTuber and filmmaker. [1] Formerly a police officer in Texas, Cooper is best known for KopBusters, a series of online videos in which he attempts to document police misconduct, and Never Get Busted Again, a series of videos aimed at teaching citizens how to evade false arrest by the police. [2]
The report found that despite marijuana use being roughly equal between blacks and whites, blacks are 3.73 times as likely to be arrested for marijuana possession. [167] Tough marijuana policies have also resulted in the disproportionate mass deportation of over 250,000 legal immigrants in the United States. [168]
Efforts to help those most affected participate in — and profit from — the legal marijuana sector have been halting […] The post The drug war devastated Black and other minority communities.
A 1995 Bureau of Justice Statistics report found that from 1991 to 1993, 16% of those who sold drugs were black, but 49% of those arrested for doing so were black. [87] A 2006 study concluded that blacks were significantly overrepresented for those arrested for drug delivery offenses in Seattle. The same study found that it was a result of law ...
Two Eugene men have been arrested after they were discovered to be running an illegal marijuana growing operation out of a property near Pleasant Hill. ... More than 1,900 growing marijuana plants ...
Authorities say an underground pot-growing operation was hidden in a shipping container and they are searching for six more suspects.
Police were searching for Longenecker, who was accused of growing ten marijuana plants on state game lands. Police searched using a bulldozer, and accidentally ran over Longenecker. [94] 2018-07-08 Joseph Pettaway (51) Black Alabama (Montgomery) Pettaway was killed by a K-9 while sleeping in an unoccupied home. [95] 2018-07-08 Craig Yelton (34 ...
(The Center Square) – Even though marijuana is legal in Illinois, the state’s highest court has ruled that the smell of raw cannabis is enough for police to search a vehicle. The case stems ...