News (Media Awareness Project) - US: AL Gore Keeps Silent After Son's Marijuana Arrest |
Title: | US: AL Gore Keeps Silent After Son's Marijuana Arrest |
Published On: | 2003-12-22 |
Source: | USA Today (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-23 18:22:38 |
AL GORE KEEPS SILENT AFTER SON'S MARIJUANA ARREST
WASHINGTON -- Former vice president Al Gore and his wife, Tipper,
maintained a public silence over the weekend about the arrest of their
21-year-old son on a charge of possessing marijuana.
Police in the Washington suburb of Bethesda, Md., arrested Albert Gore III
and two passengers Friday night after officers said that they noticed
someone driving a car without headlights about 11:30 p.m.
The Montgomery County police department said in a statement that despite
frigid temperatures, officers found that all of the windows and the sunroof
of the dark-colored Cadillac were open. Police said the officers smelled
marijuana and searched the car. They found a marijuana cigarette under the
front console and a baggie containing suspected marijuana in a cardboard
cigarette box under the front passenger seat, police said. Police said
officers smelled marijuana coming from inside a crushed soft drink can.
Gore, a student at Harvard University, and two passengers from Cambridge,
Mass., were each charged with a misdemeanor count of possession of
marijuana and released pending trial. Police identified the two passengers
as Yann Kumin, 21, and Marc Hordon, 22.
The younger Gore has been a source of concern to his parents before.
* In September 2002, military police near Fort Myer in Arlington, Va.,
ticketed Gore, then 19, for driving under the influence. They did not take
him into custody. At the time, a spokesman said the Gores were relieved no
one was hurt and were "dealing with the situation privately as a family."
* In August 2000, when Al Gore was vice president and running for president
as the Democratic nominee, the younger Gore was stopped by the North
Carolina Highway Patrol. He was accused of driving 97 mph in a 55-mph zone.
Officials dropped a reckless driving charge but fined him $125 for speeding
and suspended his driving privileges in the state.
* In 1996, when he was 13, Albert III was suspended from St. Albans, a
private school in Washington, for smoking marijuana during a school dance,
Bill Turque reported in his 2000 book, Inventing Al Gore. The school
treated it in standard style, announcing the infraction without the name of
the offender, but news organizations learned of the incident. The vice
president called leading outlets and asked them not to publish the story,
Turque wrote, and "all complied."
In 1989, when he was 6, Albert III darted in front of a car in the stadium
parking lot after a Baltimore Orioles game. He lost about 60% of his
spleen, broke a leg and a rib, suffered a concussion and bruised his
kidney, lung and pancreas. His lengthy recovery and his mother's depression
after the accident prompted Gore to forgo a run for president in 1992.
WASHINGTON -- Former vice president Al Gore and his wife, Tipper,
maintained a public silence over the weekend about the arrest of their
21-year-old son on a charge of possessing marijuana.
Police in the Washington suburb of Bethesda, Md., arrested Albert Gore III
and two passengers Friday night after officers said that they noticed
someone driving a car without headlights about 11:30 p.m.
The Montgomery County police department said in a statement that despite
frigid temperatures, officers found that all of the windows and the sunroof
of the dark-colored Cadillac were open. Police said the officers smelled
marijuana and searched the car. They found a marijuana cigarette under the
front console and a baggie containing suspected marijuana in a cardboard
cigarette box under the front passenger seat, police said. Police said
officers smelled marijuana coming from inside a crushed soft drink can.
Gore, a student at Harvard University, and two passengers from Cambridge,
Mass., were each charged with a misdemeanor count of possession of
marijuana and released pending trial. Police identified the two passengers
as Yann Kumin, 21, and Marc Hordon, 22.
The younger Gore has been a source of concern to his parents before.
* In September 2002, military police near Fort Myer in Arlington, Va.,
ticketed Gore, then 19, for driving under the influence. They did not take
him into custody. At the time, a spokesman said the Gores were relieved no
one was hurt and were "dealing with the situation privately as a family."
* In August 2000, when Al Gore was vice president and running for president
as the Democratic nominee, the younger Gore was stopped by the North
Carolina Highway Patrol. He was accused of driving 97 mph in a 55-mph zone.
Officials dropped a reckless driving charge but fined him $125 for speeding
and suspended his driving privileges in the state.
* In 1996, when he was 13, Albert III was suspended from St. Albans, a
private school in Washington, for smoking marijuana during a school dance,
Bill Turque reported in his 2000 book, Inventing Al Gore. The school
treated it in standard style, announcing the infraction without the name of
the offender, but news organizations learned of the incident. The vice
president called leading outlets and asked them not to publish the story,
Turque wrote, and "all complied."
In 1989, when he was 6, Albert III darted in front of a car in the stadium
parking lot after a Baltimore Orioles game. He lost about 60% of his
spleen, broke a leg and a rib, suffered a concussion and bruised his
kidney, lung and pancreas. His lengthy recovery and his mother's depression
after the accident prompted Gore to forgo a run for president in 1992.
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