Leitrim man charged with having in excess of €13,000 of drugs for sale or supply
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A young Mohill man who, is charged with having drugs for sale or supply in excess of €13,000 in Sligo, was returned for Circuit Court trial next June, at last Thursday’s sitting of Sligo District Court.
23-year-old Eoin Heaney, Drumgowna, Mohill is charged with possession of MDMA for sale or supply at Ballinode on April 9, 2018.
He is also charged with possession of the drug to the value of €810 for sale or supply on the same date and at the same location.
The defendant is charged with possession of N-Ethydylpentylone for sale or supply to the value of €13,000 at Mulberry Park, Sligo on April 18, 2018.
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Couple ordered by neighbours take down cross they put up as Christmas decor
The Home Owner s Association Board reiterated that unless they can provide biblical references that notes the cross as a symbol of Christmas, they will not consider this to be a Christmas decoration
December 24, 2020 09:56 GMT
A couple in North Carolina was ordered by the local homeowner s association to remove the cross they had placed in their yard as their decor for Christmas. James and Dee Faison were stunned upon receiving a letter from the association ordering them to take down the cross or face a fine of $100 (£75) for each day the cross remained on display.
Wake County neighborhood covenants technically ban all races other than Caucasians. Wake County neighbors are shocked.
The HOA then sent the family a letter saying the cross is not considered a Christmas decoration but for Easter or Passover so it needed to be removed or the family would have to pay a $100 fine.
The board eventually backed down, but that wasn t until ABC11 contacted the HOA.
Now, the family attorney said they are planning to file a lawsuit in federal court. Something needs to be done once and for all, attorney Jeremy Morris told GMA. Really to put a stop to what is becoming all too familiar to so many homeowners, and that is homeowners associations overstepping their bounds.
James and Dee Faison erected a six-foot cross outside their Mulberry Park home
The received a letter from their homeowners association (HOA) ordering them to take it down
The HOA claimed the cross was only an appropriate religious display for Easter, despite the fact the Faisons provided a Bible passage linking it to Christmas
The HOA threatened to fine the couple $100 per day for every day the cross was kept on display
The Faisons claimed it was an attack on their religious freedom and remained defiant
After a storm of publicity, the HOA now says the cross can remain for the Christmas season