Anonymous ID: ef71ed Feb. 8, 2019, 11:03 p.m. No.5089284   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9302 >>9319

>>5089254

I heard about FBI anon just about two weeks ago I think. I don't understand why someone will do this if you are correct. I do believe in Karma. It will all catch up by double soon or later.

Anonymous ID: ef71ed Feb. 8, 2019, 11:25 p.m. No.5089428   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5089369

I would too if the wall or draining swamp do not happen before 2020. I think I will never vote again. Unfortunately though, general public will not vote for Rand Paul because he has a great message. It is sad, but true.

Anonymous ID: ef71ed Feb. 8, 2019, 11:41 p.m. No.5089513   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9529

Police seize almost 7,000 pounds of cannabis from a truck. But the company that bought it says it's all legal

 

(CNN)Idaho State Police says it seized 6,701 pounds of illicit marijuana from a truck passing through the state last month. The Colorado company that bought the plants in Oregon says it's legal hemp. But the truck driver caught in the middle is now facing felony marijuana trafficking charges.

Rolling into the East Boise Point of Entry weigh station on January 24, Denis Palamarchuck's tractor-trailer was stopped by an Idaho state trooper to conduct a routine inspection. The truck's bill of lading listed the goods being hauled as hemp.

 

Palamarchuck's Bill of Lading.

"However, the trooper's training and experience made him suspicious that the cargo was in fact marijuana, not industrial hemp," the Idaho State Police wrote in a news release.

The officer opened up one of the 31 shipping bags in the rig and, using a Narcotic Identification Kit, tested a sample that came back positive for THC, the mind-altering chemical in marijuana. A drug-sniffing canine also "demonstrated a positive alert on the cargo," state police said.

Palamarchuck was immediately arrested and charged with felony trafficking of marijuana.

Court records indicate Palamarchuck spent four days in jail after the arrest. Jim Ball, Palamarchuck's attorney, told CNN his client was released after posting a $100,000 bond.

 

The 31 bags of hemp inside Palamarchuck's tractor-trailer.

Idaho's mandatory minimum laws dictate that because he was carrying more than 25 pounds of what Idaho deems is "marijuana," the truck driver – if found guilty – will serve at least five years in prison and pay a minimum $15,000 fine.

 

Except hemp is legal nationwide.

Hemp can't get you high

Marijuana and hemp are both different varieties of the same plant, Cannabis sativa L. For centuries, hemp has been transformed into a number of products: rope, building materials, clothes, shampoo, food, even beer.

There's no way to visibly discern a hemp plant from a marijuana plant. And for decades, states like Idaho and the federal government treated hemp just like any other cannabis plant.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2019/02/06/us/hemp-marijuana-idaho-trnd/index.html