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Exam Formatter V3 Crack Cocaine



At 6:45 p.m. on February 22, 1992, two Minneapolis police officers on routine patrol saw three men two were adults, one was a juvenile standing on the southeast corner of 38th Street and Fourth Avenue South. The officers knew this corner to be an area of heavy trafficking in crack cocaine. When the three men saw the police car approaching from the west, they turned and began walking in an easterly direction on 38th, looking back again as they did so. The officers pulled up behind the men and ordered them to stop. The two older men stopped instantly. However, E.D.J., the juvenile, continued walking for approximately five steps, dropped something, took two more steps, then stopped and turned around.




Exam Formatter V3 Crack Cocaine



E.D.J. was arrested and subsequently charged in juvenile court with having committed a delinquent act, specifically, fifth-degree possession of a controlled substance, namely crack cocaine. Minn.Stat. 152.025, subd. 2(1) (1992). The trial court denied E.D.J.'s motion to suppress. Relying on Hodari, it reasoned that E.D.J. abandoned the cocaine before he was seized and that therefore the abandonment was not the suppressible fruit of any illegal conduct. See State v. Dineen, 296 N.W.2d 421, 422 (Minn.1980).


[2] The United States Supreme Court's concern was not with this aspect of Dickerson, on which there was unanimous agreement by the members of this court. The United States Supreme Court's concern was with the frisk of the defendant in Dickerson and the seizure of crack cocaine felt in the course of the frisk, an issue which split this court 4-3.


Once reserved for hackers, crackers, and script kiddies, leet has since entered the mainstream.[1] It is now also used to mock newbies, also known colloquially as n00bs, or newcomers, on websites, or in gaming communities.[4] Some consider emoticons and ASCII art, like smiley faces, to be leet, while others maintain that leet consists of only symbolic word encryption. More obscure forms of leet, involving the use of symbol combinations and almost no letters or numbers, continue to be used for its original purpose of encrypted communication. It is also sometimes used as a scripting language. Variants of leet have been used for censorship purposes for many years; for instance "@$$" (ass) and "$#!+" (shit) are frequently seen to make a word appear censored to the untrained eye but obvious to a person familiar with leet. This enables coders and programmers especially to circumvent filters and speak about topics that would usually get banned. "Hacker" would end up as "H4x0r", for example.[5] 2ff7e9595c


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