Here is the original post from a shrooie which distorted the story. This is from http://www.overgrow.com
under cannabis culture.
The poster says the following:
BOY kills mom while on shrooms now w/link I think this happend in portland Oregon. A boy kills his mom while on shrooms and police say this is what u do when u are on drugs like POT & shrooms. Thats so funny i have never killed anyone (that i can remember) they say it makes u do things that u would not do (like eat 2 bowls of captain crunch) they said these kind of drugs are easy to get and the results are fatal. So remember take it easy when u are getting high it might be wise to have a freind chain you up or at least lock u in a closet. PEACE nl-grower www.kgw.com/news-local/stories/kgw_...ed.c006c1d.html
Below is the actual article which does not say what the kid said about the police saying, "police say this is what u do when u are on drugs like POT & shrooms."
That above quote is nowhere in that news report. See how some young too high all the time kinda guy starts an urban legend.
mj
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Drugs linked to Happy Valley murder 02/14/2003
By ANTONIA GIEDWOYN and DOUG IRVING, kgw.com Staff Oregon.
A man suspected of selling drugs to a teenager on the night the teen allegedly killed his mother was arrested and released from jail, Clackamas County authorities said Friday.
Sheriff?s deputies arrested Casey Emmett Kohl, 19, Thursday night after serving a search warrant at his apartment, where they found suspected heroin and evidence of sales of other controlled substances, including hallucinogenic mushrooms.
Authorities believe Kohl sold hallucinogenic mushrooms to David Seven and two friends the night of Linda Seven?s murder.
Casey Emmett Kohl. (Clackamas Co. Sheriff's Office photo)
Kohl was taken to the Clackamas County Jail but was released Friday due to jail overcrowding. He has a court appearance set for February 24.
Investigators found Linda Seven?s body when they responded early Tuesday to a report of ?suspicious circumstances? at the Happy Valley woman's home on Southeast Idleman Road. She died of multiple stab wounds, the state medical examiner?s office determined Wednesday.
Authorities believe that David Paul Seven, 17, and two 16-year-old male friends bought hallucinogenic mushrooms from Kohl earlier in the evening the day of the murder.
They believe the events that night unfolded as follows: all three returned to Seven?s home and consumed the mushrooms before David lost control, screaming and arguing with his mother. One of the two friends became afraid of Seven and left the home on foot. The other friend passed out in the home, so the teen who left called the other's girlfriend.
The passed-out teenager's parents were alerted by the girlfriend and arrived at the Seven home. After trying unsuccessfully to get someone to come to the front door, the father climbed in through an unlocked window and saw what he thought was blood on the floor. He picked up his unconscious son climbed out the window and called 911 to report the suspicious scene. The teen was later treated and released from a local hospital.
David Seven appears in court. (KGW photo)
Deputies found Linda Seven?s body in the home. Deputy Angie Blanchard, a Clackamas County Sheriff?s Office spokeswoman, said David is the only suspect in his mother?s murder. Investigators believe he committed the act alone, said Blanchard.
David appeared in Clackamas County circuit court Wednesday afternoon for an arraignment that lasted only three minutes, during which time he was ordered held without bail at the Donald E. Long juvenile detention center until his next court hearing next week. The Clackamas County District Attorney?s Office plans to present its case to a grand jury for an indictment before then.
He wore chains on his wrists and ankles, and baggy gray sweats.
Police have for years responded to complaints at the Seven house, most recently a domestic-disturbance call in April 2001. Officers also have been sent to the house to help find a runaway or to investigate an incomplete 911 call.
David was arrested in 2000 and charged with assault after he allegedly threw something at his mother. He served time at a youth facility and a boot camp, then was paroled into his mother?s custody in March 2002. He was ?progressing in his parole,? said Karen Andall, a spokeswoman for the Oregon Youth Authority.
David also has served probation for theft and criminal mischief, Youth Authority records show. His police record includes theft, criminal mischief, interfering with a peace officer, and breaking curfew, Blanchard said. She had no further details.
David is the youngest of four children, according to Clackamas County court documents filed in his parents? 1996 divorce. He and his older brother lived with their mother after the divorce; his brother later moved in with their father. His two sisters were already old enough to live on their own at the time.
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