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To: texasflower; All

Dod you all see this? Is this what you're talking about?? BYE-BYE BO!!!

APRIL 28--One of the five remaining "American Idol" finalists was once arrested for felony cocaine possession, but had the charge--and a separate marijuana count--dismissed last year after completing a so-called "diversion program," The Smoking Gun has learned.

Harold "Bo" Bice, 29, was busted in June 2001 by Huntsville, Alabama cops and hit with the drug count, a Class C felony, according to the below warrant. He was arrested again in July 2003 near Birmingham and charged with marijuana possession, public intoxication, and possession of drug paraphernalia, according to court records. He pleaded guilty to the latter two misdemeanors in December 2004. The pot charge was dismissed after Bice's successful completion of the same diversion program that covered his prior cocaine bust. In that 2001 case, a District Court preliminary hearing was set for August 29, but when a Huntsville Police Department investigator did not show, Judge Susan Moquin dismissed the Bice case, according to a court docket.

But with prosecutors prepared to refile the felony count, Bice later opted to enter a drug diversion program overseen by the district attorney's office, according to Heather Douglas, spokesperson for the Madison County D.A.

Bice formally entered the diversion program in 2003 following his pot arrest, and the two separate drug possession charges were effectively merged and covered by Bice's diversion program, according to a TSG source familiar with the cases (the cocaine charge was bounced on April 28, 2004, and the pot rap was dismissed five months ago).

Bice was arrested on the cocaine charge after scoring about 1/2 a gram of the drug from an acquaintance at Huntsville's Silver Dollar strip club, according to a source.

If convicted of the felony coke charge, Bice would have faced a maximum of 10 years in jail, though a probationary term would have been more likely. While details of what Bice had to do in the diversion program are confidential, enrollees usually must submit to urine tests, undergo drug counseling, and attend awareness classes. Bice, who worked at the time in a Huntsville bar, is a long-haired rocker whose gritty appearance and performances have stood out from "American Idol"'s usual pop pablum.


4,709 posted on 04/28/2005 8:23:19 PM PDT by Palladin (Proud to be a FReeper!)
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To: Palladin
Can you answer something for me.

In that 2001 case, a District Court preliminary hearing was set for August 29, but when a Huntsville Police Department investigator did not show, Judge Susan Moquin dismissed the Bice case, according to a court docket.

That would be the cocaine charge. Isn't it unusual for the police rep to NOT show, for a felony charge, knowing the case would then be dismissed? I find that VERY odd.

4,711 posted on 04/28/2005 8:36:41 PM PDT by Netizen
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To: Palladin

Yep. That's what we have been talking about. It was posted on this thread earlier today.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/1393158/posts?q=1&&page=1

It sounds like it was deferred because of the diversion program he entered, so it's technically not a conviction, even though he pled guilty in December 2004. At least that's what I'm getting from that jumble of information on the smoking gun. Someone wrote that in a big hurry.

There is no way he could have hidden something like that from the AI people since it was only 4 months ago.


4,715 posted on 04/28/2005 8:48:09 PM PDT by texasflower ("America's vital interests and our deepest beliefs are now one." President George W. Bush 01/20/05)
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