Two Kentucky residents were arrested last week after a detecive looked in a bag labeled "deffntely not a bag full of drugs" and found it to contain narcotics. In a press release posted to Facebook, Lauren County Sheriff's Office announced that Tricial Croley, 51, and Damon Bennett, 48, both of Williamsburg, Ky., are expected to face various charges such as possession of a controlled substance. Both had oustanding warrants, according to local media.
Officials said Tricia Croley, 51, gave the detective a false identification card belonging to someone else. A check of Croley's true identity showed she had an outstanding warrant, officials said.
Damon Bennett, 48, was also in the vehicle. The detective found that Bennett also had outstanding warrants.
Other media reports (following the press release) describe the bag as being labeled "definitely not a bag full of drugs", but the photo posted by the sheriff's department clearly shows an AI slop design, replete with typos, repetitions and the peculiar additional text "Lacky Spuge," having escaped online containment.
In Florida last year, a woman was arrested after cops found drugs in a similarly-labeled bag. In that case, the text on the bag was spelled correctly. Such vessels are widely available on Etsy and the other usual places (but not the drugs.) One may also buy bags labeleled "Bag full of drugs", ideally containing the Clockwork Orange Funko Pops
