Officers find 25 grams of meth, fentanyl in Franklin apartment; Resident arrested
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Early Tuesday morning, Franklin Police Officers served a search warrant in the Franklin Commons Apartment Complex, according to a Facebook post from the Department.
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During the search, officers seized 21 grams of suspected methamphetamine and 4 grams of suspected fentanyl.
They also seized $2,000 in cash, according to the post.
The tenant, 64-year-old Terry Taylor, was taken into custody and booked into Warren County Jail.
Taylor is charged with a second-degree felony possession of drugs and a fourth-degree misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia.
Further charges are pending, according to the post.
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5 hours ago
- Yahoo
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New York Times
11 hours ago
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Ms. Maxwell has appealed her conviction to the Supreme Court, arguing that she should not have been charged in the sex trafficking case because of a nonprosecution agreement that federal attorneys in Florida reached in 2007. The agreement promised that potential co-conspirators would not be prosecuted, but Ms. Maxwell argues it should have also protected her from prosecution in New York. Congress has subpoenaed her to testify in August. Ms. Maxwell has not decided whether she will participate, Mr. Markus said. In a post on social media late Thursday, Mr. Blanche said that the department would 'share additional information about what we learned at the appropriate time.' In May, Ms. Bondi and Mr. Blanche, both of whom previously served as lawyers for Mr. Trump, informed Mr. Trump that his name was among those of high-profile figures that appeared in the Epstein files, according to people with knowledge of the meeting. It was part of a broader briefing on the re-examination of the Epstein case by F.B.I. agents and prosecutors. In Scotland, Mr. Trump denied those reports, saying, 'No, I was never, never briefed.' It is not clear how significant the references to Mr. Trump were. But the briefing sheds light on private West Wing discussions at a moment when the president's team is desperately trying to quell the rebellion of Trump supporters who feel that he and some of his senior appointees led them astray with campaign claims that they would make the files available. Mr. Trump's top two F.B.I. appointees were among those who were adamant before taking on their government roles that there was more to uncover in the files. And earlier this year, Ms. Bondi described the files as significant material to wade through. Mr. Trump already appeared in documents related to the investigation that have been made public. He was a friend of Mr. Epstein's until they had what Mr. Trump has described as a falling-out in the early 2000s. At the White House in February, Ms. Bondi distributed a series of binders about the Epstein files that included the phone numbers of some of the president's family members, including his daughter. 'As part of our routine briefing, we made the president aware of the findings,' Ms. Bondi and Mr. Blanche wrote in a statement in response to questions about the briefing, which took place in May. 'Nothing in the files warranted further investigation or prosecution.'