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Hostage Gave Meth to Atlanta Fugitive
Associated Press ^
|
September 27,2005
| GREG BLUESTEIN
Posted on 09/27/2005 10:11:33 AM PDT by Stone Mountain
Hostage Gave Meth to Atlanta Fugitive
By GREG BLUESTEIN Associated Press Writer
September 27,2005 | ATLANTA -- The woman who says she gained the trust of suspected courthouse gunman Brian Nichols by talking about her faith in God discloses in a new book that she gave him methamphetamine during the hostage ordeal.
Ashley Smith did not share that detail with authorities after she talked her way out of captivity.
In her book, "Unlikely Angel," released Tuesday, Smith says Nichols had her bound on her bed with masking tape and an extension cord. She says he asked for marijuana, but she did not have any, and dug into her crystal methamphetamine stash instead.
Smith, who has been in a mental hospital and has flunked out of drug rehabilitation programs, says the seven-hour hostage ordeal led her to stop using drugs. She says she has not touched drugs since the night before she was taken hostage.
"If I did die, I wasn't going to heaven and say, `Oh, excuse me, God. Let me wipe my nose, because I just did some drugs before I got here,'" Smith told the Augusta Chronicle.
Police said Nichols took Smith hostage in her apartment March 11 after a shooting rampage at the Fulton County Courthouse. Nichols is accused of killing four people, including a judge.
Smith's 911 call to police when she was released led authorities to Nichols. She said she read him passages from author Rick Warren's "The Purpose-Driven Life" to gain his trust.
She was later bombarded with offers for books, movies and speaking engagements.
Financial details of the book have not been released, but she pledged to donate an undisclosed portion of the book's proceeds to a memorial fund for the victims.
© 2005 The Associated Press.
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Georgia
KEYWORDS: wodlist
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To: Last Dakotan
Take it from someone who knows, meth addicts make the best liars. Nah ..... politicians. They can do it equally well straight, drunk or high.
41
posted on
09/27/2005 10:50:24 AM PDT
by
Freebird Forever
(If they're truly public servants, why do they live in mansions?)
To: over3Owithabrain
Oh great!! As if the fella didn't have enough
problems. Now, she get's him hooked on meth.
To: Marko413
Will 1/2 cc of insulin harm a non-diabetic?
43
posted on
09/27/2005 10:52:25 AM PDT
by
spiffy
To: 2banana
Meth addicts are generally pathological liars when it comes to their drug use. I don't believe her for a second.
To: Black Tooth; spycatcher
I would guess that the authorities knew a lot of Ashley's tale was FOS. But they had their man and a nice PR story for the masses to swoon over, and to cover up some of the major screwups of the entire affair. So they either looked the other way or didn't look at all - intentionally.
To: Stone Mountain
She was obviously inspired by the book, "A Crank-Driven Life".
46
posted on
09/27/2005 10:59:19 AM PDT
by
SJSAMPLE
To: GovernmentShrinker
I like how the story says she gave up shooting the shiite the night before the "kidnapping", but the experience got her off drugs. Which one is it? How convenient to quit the night before an ordeal that you have no idea you're going to have and to keep your stash handy to pacify the perp.
Anyone who understands addiction knows her story is crap. Buying her book is akin to sticking the needle in her arm.
To: over3Owithabrain
I would guess that the authorities knew a lot of Ashley's tale was FOS. But they had their man and a nice PR story for the masses to swoon over, and to cover up some of the major screwups of the entire affair. So they either looked the other way or didn't look at all - intentionally. Agree, in so far as the LEOs knowing where he got the meth that they found in his system. They had their wonderful PR story, and after all the bumbling, they were desperately looking for an ending like this.
Say, isn't this the story about the 55 year old grandmother they put in charge of guarding this guy, that nearly tore her head off before murdering a bunch of people?
48
posted on
09/27/2005 11:07:02 AM PDT
by
Black Tooth
(The more people I meet, the more I like my dog.)
To: pa mom
Good thing he didn't come to my house. Strongest thing he would have gotten was a shot of Nyquil! I'd have given him some Hydra-Shok therapy, with this being the delivery system....
49
posted on
09/27/2005 11:11:48 AM PDT
by
AlaskaErik
(Everyone should have a subject they are ignorant about. I choose professional corporate sports.)
To: over3Owithabrain
The bigger scandal here may be that the Atlanta police almost certainly would have known pretty quick she gave him meth after drug testing him and interrogating both of them.
Do you think they kept that under wraps for feel-good positive PR reasons? Did they just not want to be seen as criticizing her Purpose Driven media spin? Or was it pragmatism? Imagine telling the public that is was actually a handy drug stash that kept her safe from a killer. Best to just let the Purpose Driven PR run wild.
To: Stone Mountain
Crystal Meth Effects
Crystal meth effects an individual not only psychologically but physically as well. The physical effects of crystal meth include: heart palpitations, blurred vision, extended wakefulness, and damage to the brain, lungs and liver. Crystal meth effects the users vision, judgment, coordination, and reflexes as well. Crystal meth can cause automobile and other machinery accidents. The effects of crystal meth may last from 2 hours to 20 hours depending on how much is smoked. Crystal meth effects behavior as well. This includes violence, hallucinations, depression and psychoses.
Crystal meth's effects increases arousal in the central nervous system by pumping up levels of two neurotransmitters, norepinephrine and dopamine. At low doses, crystal meth boosts alertness and blocks hunger and fatigue. At higher doses, crystal meth causes exhilaration and euphoria. At very high doses, the effects of crystal meth can cause agitation, paranoia, and bizarre behavior. Physical crystal meth effects include increased heart rate, blood pressure, and body temperature.
Anxiety, emotional swings, and paranoia are the most common psychological effects due to chronic use of crystal meth. Symptoms increase with long-term use, and can involve paranoid delusions and hallucinations. Violence and self-destructive behavior are common. Overdose is also a risk with crystal meth. Symptoms include fever, convulsions, and coma. Death can result from burst blood vessels in the brain (triggered by spikes in blood pressure) or heart failure
51
posted on
09/27/2005 11:19:44 AM PDT
by
handy
(Forgive me this day, my daily typos...The Truth is not a Smear!)
To: Stone Mountain
ROTFLMAO!!!
METH turned a violent killer into a submissive mouse!
How can this be? Haven't we been told just the opposite?
.
52
posted on
09/27/2005 11:25:54 AM PDT
by
radioman
To: radioman
A guy cranked up on meth ran down a crowd on the Vegas strip sidewalk the other day. Nichols probably killed all those folks in the courthouse in part to score his next high, seeing how he was likely without for a few days in the hoosegow.
Argue for legalizing drugs if you wish, but please don't glorify the stuff. It kills.
To: spycatcher
Do you think they kept that under wraps for feel-good positive PR reasons?
Yes. The country swooned over this feel-good tale of beauty and the beast with some tent-revival thrown in. Took the attention away from the total breakdown of law enforcement and governmental authority that directly led to 4 murders.
To: Gator101
Since she was a user herself, I am guessing that she could guess what the effect would be.That statement makes the assumption that the drug would have the same effect on all people. It doesnt. In fact, for all she knew the influence of the drug is what made him homocidal.
55
posted on
09/27/2005 11:40:01 AM PDT
by
South40
(Amnesty for ILLEGALS is a slap in the face to the USBP!)
To: over3Owithabrain
Argue for legalizing drugs if you wish,
I won't argue for legalization. I believe the War On Drugs is as evil as the drugs we are making war on. If the people of your state want meth, alcohol or any other drug illegal that is their right. It is not the right of the federal government to wage war on a substance that people freely choose to consume.
but please don't glorify the stuff. It kills
I haven't glorified anything. I believe alcohol is a dangerous drug exactly the same as meth. I don't use alcohol or meth. Alcohol kills more people than meth. Alcohol destroys more lives than meth. How can you justify waging war on one but not the other?
.
56
posted on
09/27/2005 11:46:59 AM PDT
by
radioman
To: over3Owithabrain
I still say he knew this woman beforehand. He was
jonesing for drugs frightened of goblins and on the lam and he knew where to find
them safety. Her story was full of holes then as it is now. She help him hide a car when she could have called
the cops, the mother ship, gave him
meth dilithium crystals and made him
pancakes a lift off personal jet pack. He surrendered because
he wanted to, his jet pack failed and he couldn't reach low orbit, not because she converted him.
A nice tale was spun by two junkies a freeper with a vivid imagination.
57
posted on
09/27/2005 11:47:04 AM PDT
by
Protagoras
(Call it what it is, partial delivery murder)
To: spycatcher
As I recall, when he got to prison he became a Muslim.
58
posted on
09/27/2005 11:47:22 AM PDT
by
lupie
To: alnick
I doubt she had a choice. The article said she dug into her meth stash and gave it to him. If he knew she had it he probably would have just taken it. He didn't know she had it she told him she did, so she had a choice.
59
posted on
09/27/2005 11:48:16 AM PDT
by
South40
(Amnesty for ILLEGALS is a slap in the face to the USBP!)
To: Uncle Joe Cannon
As I see it, admitting to having had enough drugs to tranquilize a killer isn't as series as denying one inhaled....;-)
60
posted on
09/27/2005 11:48:19 AM PDT
by
azhenfud
(He who always is looking up seldom finds others' lost change.)
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