Walker County Messenger

Man found guilty of traffickin­g meth

- From Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit

On Tuesday, May 24, Thomas Garrison, a 74-yearold man from Whitfield County was convicted by a Walker County jury of traffickin­g methamphet­amine and possession with intent to distribute methamphet

amine.

The evidence presented at trial showed that on April 5, 2021, Thomas Garrison was located at 327 Joe Robertson Road in Walker County by agents with the Lookout Mountain Drug Task Force.

After K-9 Carlos (now retired) and his handler Sgt. Nick Terry detected narcotics inside Thomas Garrison’s F-250 Ford truck, agents secured the truck to request a search warrant.

Once the search warrant was in hand, Agent Allen Ellenburg searched the truck and recovered two ounces of suspected methamphet­amine from the driver’s door storage area. Agent Ellenburg discovered an additional 4.4 pounds of methamphet­amine in the truck’s back seat on the driver’s side.

The jury heard evidence from Agent Robert Tate that Thomas Garrison admitted to possessing the methamphet­amine at the scene and the defendant took law enforcemen­t to a safe in Whitfield County where he had stored $21,000 in profits from selling methamphet­amine. Agents Ellenburg, Tate and Terry all testified that this was the most methamphet­amine they have ever seized at one time.

After a two-day trial, presided over by Superior Court Judge Brian House, a jury returned a guilty verdict to traffickin­g methamphet­amine and possession with intent to distribute methamphet­amine. Sentencing took place immediatel­y after the verdict was announced. At sentencing the state introduced evidence that Garrison has been convicted four separate times in Whitfield County, going all the way back to 1999. His prior conviction­s include possession with the intent to distribute marijuana, possession with the intent to distribute methamphet­amine, and possession of methamphet­amine. Judge House imposed a sentence of 30 years, with the first 25 years to be served in confinemen­t without the possibilit­y of parole.

The State of Georgia was

represente­d by Assistant District Attorney Winston Franklin.

Agents with the Lookout Mountain Drug Task Force, Walker County Sheriff’s Office, LaFayette Police Department, and Dalton Police Department investigat­ed the case.

District Attorney Chris Arnt

thanked the officers and agencies involved for their efforts in stopping this methamphet­amine from getting into our communitie­s. “While some areas of the country seem to look the other way or even encourage illegal

drug use,” Arnt said, “we take a hard line against drug dealers in the LMJC. We have no tolerance for those that try to profit from other’s misery.”

ADA Franklin’s argument to the jury noted that “this was not just about drugs but that the methamphet­amine was four pounds of pain, 41 pounds of heartbreak, and four pounds of poison. Thanks to the efforts of law enforcemen­t and the DA’s office these drugs never made it out to our streets.”

 ?? ?? Thomas Garrison
Thomas Garrison

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