Dallas Police Chief David Brown Sent Drug Tip With a Free Sample of Suspected Crystal Meth

Categories: Crime

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With the mountains of tips the Dallas Police Department fields on any given day, and with finite resources forcing the department to prioritize and decide which leads to follow up on and which to put on the back-burner, it's only reasonable for a concerned citizen to wonder how to make his or her complaint stand out from the pack. This week, one Dallas resident stumbled upon a foolproof way to do exactly that: mailing the police chief what appears to be crystal meth.

The envelope, addressed to Police Chief David Brown, arrived at Dallas PD headquarters at 9 a.m. Wednesday.

"The letter pretty much gave him some names, apparently [of] people who were dealing drugs, and it had some crystal substance," says DPD spokesman Juan Fernandez.

The sample was apparently offered as proof of the tip's veracity, Fernandez says, which is unusual. It did not, however, have the desired effect.

"When they field tested it, it was inconclusive for either methamphetamine or amphetamine, so they just took the letter and placed it in Baylor Property room," Fernandez says. "I guess they're" trying to track down the sender, though Fernandez didn't make it sound like it's much of a priority.

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19 comments
mcdallas
mcdallas

"When they field tested it, it was inconclusive for either methamphetamine or amphetamine, so they just took the letter and placed it in Baylor Property room..."


And then the OU Property room came to town...

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

The Chief will probably have a very efficient workday.

MaxNoDifference
MaxNoDifference

At first I thought that Chief Brown was sending the tip and sample.  Then I actually read the article.

TheCredibleHulk
TheCredibleHulk topcommenter

Amazing that nobody freaked out about anthrax or some such.

Has "ebola-panic" knocked "anthrax-panic" clean out of our collective paranoia? 

wcvemail
wcvemail

First! and... I got nothin', as did the buyers of that "inconclusive" substance.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@Donk

Ah, so you're a dentist.

NewsDog
NewsDog

@MaxNoDifference I did too.  It's that damn reading and comprehension thing we were taught back before TASS, TAKS, STARR and whatever they are calling it today. 

To further appreciate the irony go read Shoe today... 10/10/14

wcvemail
wcvemail

@TheCredibleHulk

Oh, you mean that historical, doesn't-apply-anymore case of several long-distance murders of strangers by a bizarre substance that's never been tracked, the case in which the FBI first hounded the wrong person for years and taxpayers paid dearly for it, the case in which the FBI then hounded a second person into committing suicide, with no resolution whatsoever, but the FBI won't talk about it? The case that inspires run-on sentences? 

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@wcvemail 

you may have the answer of why the "tip" was mailed into the Chief...

wcvemail
wcvemail

@mavdog @wcvemail

It took several years after Drugs As We Know Them Today began, but the Lege finally made it illegal to sell substances purporting to be illicit drugs. That plugged a loophole when police couldn't bust open-air salesmen of fake stuff, or at least, stuff that couldn't be proven in the police lab. And straight out of "News of the Weird," there are many cases where a disappointed buyer called police to complain that the stuff wasn't real. 

wcvemail
wcvemail

@DonkeyHotay @wcvemail

That's not a BAM!, no, I've seen those, this is more like a...whatdyacallit...Seriously Sideways Segue? Terribly Twisted Tangent? 

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@TheCredibleHulk

I think we have our perp.

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