Teen allegedly mistakes tomato for pot

Published: Feb. 18, 2012 at 4:41 PM

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., Feb. 18 (UPI) – A Florida teenager was arrested after he allegedly stole a tomato plant he mistook for marijuana.

Angela Cartwright, of Holly Hill, said the plant was stolen Feb. 10 from her home, The Daytona Beach News-Journal reported. She told police she saw the 15-year-old grabbing it through her open kitchen window as she returned from walking her son to the school bus stop.

“See, I have one of your pot plants,” the brazen teen allegedly yelled at her as he ran off.

“I chased him and I yelled out, “You stupid little brat, it’s a tomato plant!” Cartwright told the newspaper Thursday.

Police made an arrest Wednesday after Cartwright, walking her son to the school bus, spotted a teen she identified as the thief.


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Teen allegedly mistakes tomato for pot – United Press International

Published: Feb. 18, 2012 at 4:41 PM

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., Feb. 18 (UPI) – A Florida teenager was arrested after he allegedly stole a tomato plant he mistook for marijuana.

Angela Cartwright, of Holly Hill, said the plant was stolen Feb. 10 from her home, The Daytona Beach News-Journal reported. She told police she saw the 15-year-old grabbing it through her open kitchen window as she returned from walking her son to the school bus stop.

“See, I have one of your pot plants,” the brazen teen allegedly yelled at her as he ran off.

“I chased him and I yelled out, “You stupid little brat, it’s a tomato plant!” Cartwright told the newspaper Thursday.

Police made an arrest Wednesday after Cartwright, walking her son to the school bus, spotted a teen she identified as the thief.


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Most of calls between indicted tomato mogul and female attorney could be released to prosecutors, order says

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Indicted tomato king Frederick Scott Salyer may be cooling his heels under house arrest in his Pebble Beach mansion, but a series of phone calls made while he was held at the Sacramento County jail is now the focus of keen interest in the federal courthouse downtown.

The calls between Salyer and San Jose attorney Cynthia Longoria have been the subject of a fierce legal battle since the summer of 2010, with government prosecutors seeking permission to listen to the 119 calls and Salyer’s lawyers insisting they are protected under attorney-client privilege.

On Wednesday, U.S. Magistrate Judge Edmund F. Brennan, who listened to the calls to determine whether prosecutors can get access to them, rendered his decision.

“The salacious details of these cited conversations need not be repeated here,” Brennan wrote in an order that could release most of them to prosecutors. “Suffice it to note that they demonstrate a relationship that was personal, intimate and plainly not a professional attorney-client relationship.”

The order is the latest in an epic legal battle the federal government has been waging against Salyer, the scion of one of California’s land baron families and a multimillionaire accused of conspiracy, bribery and racketeering in an effort to corner the nation’s market for tomato products.

Salyer, who was arrested in February 2010 after years of investigation by the FBI, has denied the charges and awaits trial while sequestered at his Pebble Beach home on $ 6 million bail.

Before his release on bail, he languished in a Sacramento County Jail cell for seven months, and almost immediately began to draw scrutiny for the manner in which he took to his confinement.

At one point, a paralegal was found to have delivered to the jailed Salyer a stack of letters marked “Atty Client” that contained an emery board, some personal notes, a photo of a woman’s head and “a picture of her naked, holding two tomatoes in front of her body,” court papers state.

Another time he was recorded having a despondent and angry call with one of his daughters about his ex-wife.

“She has my life in her hands, and she’s just walking around … bragging about how she’s got me in jail,” he told his daughter Caroline.

“It’ll be a cold day in hell before she ever gets the house,” he added later. “I’ll give everything to the government, remember I mean I’ll do anything, I’ll destroy everything.”

Now, Salyer is facing scrutiny over the nature of his relationship with Longoria, who his lawyers have maintained is an attorney working on the case whose conversations should not be made available to prosecutors.

Typically, phone calls made from the jail are taped and a recorded warning announces at the start of the call that they may be monitored. Attorney-client calls are not subject to review by prosecutors, but both sides have fought since 2010 over the nature of the relationship between Longoria and Salyer.

U.S. District Judge Lawrence K. Karlton asked Brennan to listen to the recordings and decide the matter, and the magistrate concluded that “the recordings appear to be predominately of a personal nature in which Mr. Salyer had telephone visits with a girlfriend who happened to be an attorney.”

Brennan’s 27-page order does not give examples of the “salacious details” he found, but explains that the conversations included talk of friends, food, vacations and other personal matters.

They also included discussion of using the attorney-client privilege, which Brennan wrote was “revealing.”

“You ought to send me some pictures, I, you can put them in an attorney-client privileged envelope,” Salyer told Longoria.

“Oh, yeah, that’s what I want to do. I want to violate the attorney client, uh, uh, thing some more so that, you know, maybe they will ban my stuff.”

The calls also revealed that Longoria’s efforts to assist lead attorney Malcolm Segal with a brief were rebuffed by Segal. And, Brennan determined there were questions about whether Salyer actually was relying on Longoria for any legal advice.

“…(T)here are examples too numerous to quote in which Salyer explained at length to Longoria his own legal opinions and strategies but shows no reliance whatsoever on the legal advice or expertise of Longoria,” Brennan wrote.

He cited one exchange about grand jury proceedings.

“Salyer: You can’t have a lawyer.”

“Longoria: You can’t have a lawyer with you at a grand jury?”

“Salyer: What the hell law school did you go to? You go to Sears or Montgomery Ward, or a big discount Wal-Mart? You can’t have a lawyer with you in a grand jury.”

In fact, California Bar records indicate Longoria went to Loyola Law School in Los Angeles and is an active member of the Bar. However, neither Bar records nor directory information list a law office telephone number for her in the San Jose area. She did not respond to an email sent to the Yahoo.com account listed for her on the Bar website.

In the end, Brennan found that five of the conversations were privileged. The rest, he said, can be listened to by the government.


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Deputies: Teen after pot steals tomato plant instead near Holly Hill

Call it a case of mistaken plant identity.

A 15-year-old boy climbed into Angela Cartwright’s kitchen window thinking to make off with a marijuana plant, but instead the young thief was actually stealing a potted tomato plant, a sheriff’s arrest report shows.

As he was running from Cartwright’s house on Carmen Avenue near Holly Hill on Feb. 10 just after 7 a.m., the teen even yelled at Cartwright, “See, I have one of your pot plants!” the arrest report states.

Cartwright had arrived at her residence that morning after leaving her 6-year-old son off at the school bus stop. When she walked into her home she saw a teenager whose torso was inside her kitchen window and the other half of his body was hanging outside, the report shows.

When Cartwright yelled, “Hey!” the suspect jumped back and bolted, the potted tomato plant in hand.

“I chased him and I yelled out, “You stupid little brat, it’s a tomato plant!” Cartwright said Thursday.

The teen gave Cartwright the slip, but Wednesday morning as Cartwright and a friend walked Cartwright’s son to the bus stop, they spotted the teenager a second time, the report shows.

The boy was wearing the same clothes Cartwright had seen on him five days earlier, she said.

“I said to my friend, ‘That’s him,’ ” Cartwright said. “It looked like he was going to hide from me, but then he stayed there.”

According to the report and Cartwright, the boy, who The Daytona Beach News-Journal is not identifying because of his age, admitted to stealing the tomato plant, valued at under $ 5.

“He seemed like a nice kid,” Cartwright said. “It almost seemed as if he wanted to get caught.”

While Cartwright, her friend and the teen waited for a deputy to arrive at the bus stop, the 35-year-old mother took the opportunity to give a lecture.

“I gave him the ‘mother lecture,’ ” Cartwright said. “He listened and I told him he should be in school.”

The teen was charged with unarmed burglary of an occupied dwelling, his first offense, the report states.

When interviewed, the young suspect told a lawman the same thing — he broke into Cartwright’s house thinking he was getting away with a marijuana plant, the report shows.

“It wasn’t pot, it was just Walmart tomatoes,” Cartwright said with a laugh.

The teen was taken to the Volusia Regional Juvenile Detention Center in Daytona Beach.


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Most of calls between indicted tomato mogul and female attorney could be released to prosecutors, order says – Syracuse Post-Standard

Feb. 16, 2012, 11:16 p.m. EST

SACRAMENTO, Calif. _ Indicted tomato king Frederick Scott Salyer may be cooling his heels under house arrest in his Pebble Beach mansion, but a series of phone calls made while he was held at the Sacramento County jail is now the focus of keen interest in the federal courthouse downtown.

The calls between Salyer and San Jose attorney Cynthia Longoria have been the subject of a fierce legal battle since the summer of 2010, with government prosecutors seeking permission to listen to the 119 calls and Salyer’s lawyers insisting they are protected under attorney-client privilege.

On Wednesday, U.S. Magistrate Judge Edmund F. Brennan, who listened to the calls to determine whether prosecutors can get access to them, rendered his decision.

“The salacious details of these cited conversations need not be repeated here,” Brennan wrote in an order that could release most of them to prosecutors. “Suffice it to note that they demonstrate a relationship that was personal, intimate and plainly not a professional attorney-client relationship.”

The order is the latest in an epic legal battle the federal government has been waging against Salyer, the scion of one of California’s land baron families and a multimillionaire accused of conspiracy, bribery and racketeering in an effort to corner the nation’s market for tomato products.

Salyer, who was arrested in February 2010 after years of investigation by the FBI, has denied the charges and awaits trial while sequestered at his Pebble Beach home on $ 6 million bail.

Before his release on bail, he languished in a Sacramento County Jail cell for seven months, and almost immediately began to draw scrutiny for the manner in which he took to his confinement.

At one point, a paralegal was found to have delivered to the jailed Salyer a stack of letters marked “Atty Client” that contained an emery board, some personal notes, a photo of a woman’s head and “a picture of her naked, holding two tomatoes in front of her body,” court papers state.

Another time he was recorded having a despondent and angry call with one of his daughters about his ex-wife.

“She has my life in her hands, and she’s just walking around … bragging about how she’s got me in jail,” he told his daughter Caroline.

“It’ll be a cold day in hell before she ever gets the house,” he added later. “I’ll give everything to the government, remember I mean I’ll do anything, I’ll destroy everything.”

Now, Salyer is facing scrutiny over the nature of his relationship with Longoria, who his lawyers have maintained is an attorney working on the case whose conversations should not be made available to prosecutors.

Typically, phone calls made from the jail are taped and a recorded warning announces at the start of the call that they may be monitored. Attorney-client calls are not subject to review by prosecutors, but both sides have fought since 2010 over the nature of the relationship between Longoria and Salyer.

U.S. District Judge Lawrence K. Karlton asked Brennan to listen to the recordings and decide the matter, and the magistrate concluded that “the recordings appear to be predominately of a personal nature in which Mr. Salyer had telephone visits with a girlfriend who happened to be an attorney.”

Brennan’s 27-page order does not give examples of the “salacious details” he found, but explains that the conversations included talk of friends, food, vacations and other personal matters.

They also included discussion of using the attorney-client privilege, which Brennan wrote was “revealing.”

“You ought to send me some pictures, I, you can put them in an attorney-client privileged envelope,” Salyer told Longoria.

“Oh, yeah, that’s what I want to do. I want to violate the attorney client, uh, uh, thing some more so that, you know, maybe they will ban my stuff.”

The calls also revealed that Longoria’s efforts to assist lead attorney Malcolm Segal with a brief were rebuffed by Segal. And, Brennan determined there were questions about whether Salyer actually was relying on Longoria for any legal advice.

“…(T)here are examples too numerous to quote in which Salyer explained at length to Longoria his own legal opinions and strategies but shows no reliance whatsoever on the legal advice or expertise of Longoria,” Brennan wrote.

He cited one exchange about grand jury proceedings.

“Salyer: You can’t have a lawyer.”

“Longoria: You can’t have a lawyer with you at a grand jury?”

“Salyer: What the hell law school did you go to? You go to Sears or Montgomery Ward, or a big discount Wal-Mart? You can’t have a lawyer with you in a grand jury.”

In fact, California Bar records indicate Longoria went to Loyola Law School in Los Angeles and is an active member of the Bar. However, neither Bar records nor directory information list a law office telephone number for her in the San Jose area. She did not respond to an email sent to the Yahoo.com account listed for her on the Bar website.

In the end, Brennan found that five of the conversations were privileged. The rest, he said, can be listened to by the government.

___

(c)2012 The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.)

Visit The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.) at www.sacbee.com

Distributed by MCT Information Services


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