News (Media Awareness Project) - US WI: School Teacher Convicted Of Pot Possession Ordered To |
Title: | US WI: School Teacher Convicted Of Pot Possession Ordered To |
Published On: | 2000-01-07 |
Source: | Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 07:17:40 |
SCHOOL TEACHER CONVICTED OF POT POSSESSION ORDERED TO WRITE CLASS A LETTER
MERRILL, Wis. (AP) -- A former grade school teacher convicted of
possessing marijuana must write a letter to his former students
explaining the dangers of drugs and the consequences of them on his
life, a judge ruled.
Michael Meteyard, 24, was arrested when someone found a marijuana
smoking pipe on the ground next to his car in the Jefferson Elementary
School parking lot and an investigation found marijuana in a plastic
bag in his car, court records said.
Meteyard resigned from his job as a fourth-grade teacher after he was
arrested Dec. 1.
As part of an agreement reached Thursday, Meteyard pleaded guilty to
the misdemeanor marijuana possession charge and a charge of possessing
drug paraphernalia was dropped, prosecutors said.
Besides ordering the teacher to write a letter to his class, Lincoln
County Circuit Judge Glenn Hartley sentenced Meteyard to 10 days in
jail with work privileges, fined him $500 and revoked his driving
privileges for six months.
MERRILL, Wis. (AP) -- A former grade school teacher convicted of
possessing marijuana must write a letter to his former students
explaining the dangers of drugs and the consequences of them on his
life, a judge ruled.
Michael Meteyard, 24, was arrested when someone found a marijuana
smoking pipe on the ground next to his car in the Jefferson Elementary
School parking lot and an investigation found marijuana in a plastic
bag in his car, court records said.
Meteyard resigned from his job as a fourth-grade teacher after he was
arrested Dec. 1.
As part of an agreement reached Thursday, Meteyard pleaded guilty to
the misdemeanor marijuana possession charge and a charge of possessing
drug paraphernalia was dropped, prosecutors said.
Besides ordering the teacher to write a letter to his class, Lincoln
County Circuit Judge Glenn Hartley sentenced Meteyard to 10 days in
jail with work privileges, fined him $500 and revoked his driving
privileges for six months.
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