Dopes.

Police say they have surveillance video of John Reyes Rodriguez, from Seaside, robbing the store.
Officers also said San Jose police arrested Cameron Myles Ferguson, from Marina, last night in connection to the robbery.
Dopes.

Police say they have surveillance video of John Reyes Rodriguez, from Seaside, robbing the store.
Officers also said San Jose police arrested Cameron Myles Ferguson, from Marina, last night in connection to the robbery.
Next time slip them sleeping pills or strong laxatives.

After being given the Oxycontin, the man left the store. He might have left the area in a late 1980s or early 1990s dark gray or black Ford Explorer, police said. The SUV was dirty, police said.
The robber was described as Latino, in his mid-20s, 5 foot 7 inches to 5 foot 9 inches tall, weighing 150 pounds. He was wearing a black baseball cap with a DC shoe logo, a blue hooded sweatshirt with white writing on the back, gray sweatpants and white shoes, police said.
Prison time for the gun toting robber. Though family & council thought he could get probation. Nah.
A tearful Niccole Tiffany said her husband’s arrest and incarceration were a blessing in disguise.
“Brennan is finally sober,” she said. “Jail has liberated our family from the prison of addiction.”

I don’t make this up.
What about not blowing thousands on web sites or tourist trolleys. If they go the foundation route (like the Mvsevm) the library will always be open though.
A “library summit” held Feb. 6 at the Pacific Grove Natural History Museum drew more than 100 people, including City Council members, library board members, city administrators, members of Friends of the Library, library staff and others, said senior librarian Lisa Maddalena.
Ideas raised included proposed new services, approaching Pebble Beach residents as a potential source of tax revenue, using taxes from medical marijuana sales in the city if cannabis clinics are approved, establishing a library foundation to raise funds, and trying, once again, to get a two-thirds majority of voters to approve a tax to keep the library open.
No respect. Lock them up for life.
As a result of an on-going narcotics investigation, the Monterey Police Department served a search warrant at 773 Hawthorne #6, Monterey on February 10, 2010 at 3:15 PM.
Evidence of narcotics possession and sales were located, and property, stolen from a recent grand theft from a vehicle on Hawthorne, was recovered.
The following suspects were arrested and charged with 11378 HS, possession of methamphetamine for sale; 11377 HS, possession of ethamphetamine; 11350 HS, possession of morphine and Oxycontin and 11351 HS, possession of morphine and Oxycontin for sale:
John Broaddus, a 40 year old male from Monterey and Roselyn Artellan, a 18 year old female from Seaside.
The following suspects were arrested and charged with 11364 HS, possession of drug paraphernalia and 496(a) PC, possession of stolen property:
Gary Evans, a 30 year old male from Seaside and Michelle Szody, a 24 year old female from Pacific Grove.
The fifth suspect, Michael Cortez, a 38 year old male from Monterey, was arrested and charged with being under the influence of a controlled substance and possession of stolen property.
Broaddus, Evans and Cortez were booked at the Monterey County Jail and Artellan and Szody were booked at the Monterey City Jail. All are being held in lieu of bail.
The investigation into property found at the scene, to include credit cards and identification cards, is pending.

KSBW Photo
Medicated to the max.
According to testimony at her preliminary hearing, (King) had traces of seven prescribed drugs and a small amount of marijuana in her system. She has five prior convictions for driving under the influence and faces a potential life sentence if convicted.
In prison or a mental facility, King will never be free to operate a car again. That’s good.

KSBW Photo
Prosecutor Steve Somers confirmed Tuesday that Deborah King is being returned to Monterey County to face prosecution for allegedly running down 35-year-old Joel Woods as he was picking up his son outside Pacific Grove Middle School on Sept. 2, 2008.
King, who has five drunken-driving convictions in Kern County, is charged with murder and vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated. Somers alleges that she was under the influence of prescription drugs when the accident occurred.
Picture from Coast Weakly

no, won’t be passing out acid but maybe something else . . .
Suspect lived on Cypress street in New Monterey and stupid enough to be driving his getaway car into P.G. Why do you think they call it ‘dope’.
The suspect, 32-year-old Brennan Tiffany, was arrested at gunpoint in the Safeway parking lot on Forest Hill Wednesday morning, when officers in an unmarked car spotted him.
Around 10 a.m. Wednesday, a Pacific Grove detective and a detective from Marina following leads in an unmarked car fortuitously saw Tiffany’s Toyota SUV entering P.G. via Highway 68. They summoned other officers and initiated a felony stop, pulling the car over in the Safeway parking lot and drawing their guns before approaching to arrest the driver..

According to the police the suspect walked into the pharmacy and handed the clerk a note demanding Oxycontin. The police say that the suspect then lifted up his shirt revealing a handgun.
The clerk handed over the Oxycontin and the suspect fled the scene.
Next time, slip them sleeping pills. Or laxatives.
Last robbery was in June. That robber got caught when the P.G.P.D. got lucky. They must have been too busy investigating noisy wind chimes today..

KSBW Photo
The young father was picking up his son, Jacob, in front of Pacific Grove Middle School Sept. 2, 2008, when Deborah King allegedly ran him down in her BMW SUV. Though she was arrested and later charged with murder and gross vehicular manslaughter, King has yet to face a trial.
But that doesn’t sit well with Summer Coe, a good friend of the Woods family, who believes King — with five previous DUI convictions on her record — should pay for her fatal error.
“I am outraged that she has yet to face any charges,” Coe said. “It seems that she kind of got away with playing the victim card, where someone else might have been held accountable.”
Going to Patton State Hospital. Does not sound like a cakewalk..
At least one psychiatrist at Patton said he believed conditions have worsened during the period of federal oversight, in part because of a sharp increase in demand for documentation that he says has left clinicians less time for patient care.
“Everyone is so fatigued doing paperwork,” said the psychiatrist, who asked not to be named out of fear it could jeopardize his job. “The assault rate has increased.”
Data posted on the website of the state Department of Mental Health show there have been recent increases in patient-on-patient aggression resulting in major injury as well as increases in the number of self-inflicted major injuries.