The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Odds & Ends

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Tattoo face

STOCKTON, CALIF. (AP) » Authoritie­s say an inmate with a skull tattooed on his face who escaped last month froma work crew in central California is back in custody.

The Fresno Bee reports police arrested 27-year-old CoreyHughe­s onThursday at a home in Stockton.

Officers set up a perimeter and knocked on the door, but no one answered. Stockton police then sent a police dog into the residence, and Hughes was apprehende­d. Hewas taken to a hospital for treatment before being booked into San Joaquin County Jail.

Hughes was reported missing from a work crew near Interstate 5 in Stockton on Nov. 27.

He had been serving time on a weapons charge and was due to be released in February. fans around the green.

The charity took out an insurance policy on the payouts, but a federal appeals court says the policy only covered holes at least 170 yards long.

Old White Charities Inc. accused the insurer of breach of contract for not covering the payout, but the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected that claim.

Marijuana activists arrested for pot

SACRAMENTO, CALIF. (AP) » Amarijuana activist whose advocacyda­tes to the 1960s countercul­ture has been arrested in California toting 22 pounds of illegal marijuana, prosecutor­s said Wednesday.

Irvin Dana Beal, 70, of New York, was arrested Saturday in far Northern California after prosecutor­s said his rental car was spotted weaving across the road and driving 20 miles below the speed limit. James Statzer, 51, of Michigan, also was arrested.

The arrest occurred along a well-traveled highway in California’s famed Emerald Triangle area, known for its high-grade pot. A police dog smelled marijuana during the stop and 22 pounds of the drug was found.

Both men pleaded not guilty tocharges of possessing drugs for sale and felony transporta­tion charges and were being held in lieu of $75,000 bail.

Beal has been promoting marijuana’s medical benefits for decades. His activism dates to the 1960s heyday of Abbie Hoffman and the Youth Internatio­nal Party, known as the Yip- pies.

Recreation­al sales of marijuana become legal in California on Jan. 1, and medical marijuana has beenlegal in the state since 1996. But it’s still illegal to transport large quantities of the drug or to take it out of state.

It’s not uncommon for trafficker­s to think they can nowtranspo­rt pot risk-free, said Deputy District Attorney Colleen Murray, who is prosecutin­g the case.

“People are like, ‘It’s legal.’ So often they’re very open with officers, ‘Oh hey, I have 100 pounds,’” she said. “That’s not the way it works.”

Defense attorney Tom Ballanco said it’s not clear if his two clients thought they were acting legally.

Friends were raising money for Beal’s bail, Ballanco said, concerned that he is a heart attack survivor and has other illnesses. Beal isn’t a flight risk and looks forward to fighting the charges, Ballanco said.

“The nature of his life, really, is one of activism. He’s not the type of person who’s going to flee from this,” Ballanco said. “He’s certainly a very colorful figure. I’m happy to be representi­ng him and his co-defendant.”

For law enforcemen­t, these were routine arrests in an area where trafficker­s typically tote hundreds if not thousands of pounds of famed Emerald Triangle pot to East Coast states.

“People can buy it here for maybe $800 or $1,000 a pound,” Murray said. “Once they get back there ... they’re going to get maybe $3,000 to $4,000 a pound for it. That’s a nice profit.”

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