Regardless of the legal consequences i see this in the same category as jaywalking or banging a prostitute in terms of lawlessness.
Off-season is when I appreciate your humor the most. Drowns out my bad memories of jaywalking and ruining lives.
Feel free to judge. Based on my speculation most cases of of prostitution in the US. Maybe if you were surfing at the same time...
What if you were jaywalking to a prostitute that you plan on purchasing with weed? I mean, does the combination of the 3 cause any sort of dilemma for you?
if "lawlessness" means infringing upon the well-being of others...i almost buy it. but this implies that prostitutes are actually freely choosing their "profession". and i think that's not reality. anyway, i'm not sure if you're doing schtick, but the starting point of this: what does a 14-year vet getting caught with two pounds of weed mean for his mentoring ability? a f***ing lot, bro.
He was caught with enough that he can be charged with intention to sell. Isn't the point though that he was in a bad part of LA, buying/selling/smoking a lot of weed, while being a multi-million dollar athlete? It's a stupid decision. It's a worse decision than D'Angelo Russell with his phone. It's not the kind of thing you want from a guy you just spent multi-millions on to be a mentor for a young team. The point isn't exactly how much weed he had or what he planned to do with it, it's that this isn't a situation a person like him should ever be caught in.
It's stupid for an athlete for sure. Are you seriously going to say that personal use is same as selling it? A whole brick, not portioned out, is obviously not for distribution. The cops and lawyers just use the amount to inflict a harsher penalty. Again, it's stupid, but he's more Ricky Williams than Nate Newton. There needs to be a distinction.