Can You Shoot Crack With Kool Aid

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In addition to locating Dyer, authorities found crack cocaine, syringes and other drug paraphernalia in her possession. Dyer admitted mixing the crack and Kool-Aid, and was charged with drug possession, a fifth-degree felony. Crawford County Municipal Court Judge Shane Leuthold had some harsh words for Dyer when he set her bond at $500,000 shortly after Christmas. 'In August you appeared in front of me, and based on your appearance it was apparent to me that you had a drug problem,' he told her at that time, adding that she had been advised last summer to enter a drug-treatment program, which she did not do. 'You look 100 times worse now than you did last August. You look like a damn trainwreck. I believe you tried to kill yourself, unintentionally.

  1. Can You Shoot Crack With Kool Aid Video

Can You Shoot Crack With Kool Aid Video

You're not going to die on my watch,' the judge said. Wednesday was Dyer's day before his brother, Crawford County Common Pleas Court Judge Sean Leuthold, who accepted her plea of guilty to the drug-possession charge and sentenced her to eight months in prison.

Kool

'When you get out, do you plan on coming back to Crawford County?' He asked her. Dyer answered yes. 'I've done everything I can to show that this is not the county to get into drugs. If you go back into drugs, you will likely get the same result,' the judge said. Follow Todd Hill on Twitter: @ToddHillMNJ.

(Newser) – Nine elementary school kids in South Carolina have been suspended for violating a school drug policy because they were caught with so-called 'happy crack,' a mixture of Kool-Aid and sugar that is not actually illicit but, simply by resembling an illicit substance, violates school policy. Reports that their punishment was reduced from expulsion to suspension, though privacy laws prevent the school from disclosing whether students, who are around age 10, were distributing or simply eating the powder. 'The way the school called me, I thought my son died,' one mother tells. 'She said there's this epidemic going on at school with happy crack. I Googled it. I'm like Kool-Aid and sugar, are you serious? I was appalled.

I was floored. I really didn't think it would go to this extreme.'

But the policy, which parents say they were unaware of, clearly states that 'no student will market or distribute any substance. Similar in color, shape, size, or markings of a controlled substance.' Parents say kids can buy pixie sticks that are essentially the same powder.

Last year, a Cleveland 8th-grader was suspended for five days for a similar 'crack candy' offense. (Sugar, by the way,.).

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