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Asker

Posted over 13 years ago.

Assumptions? No. I saw him get my best friend really high and then take advantage of her. I saw him stoned out of his mind for about a week straight and he's a cruel and vicious person who attempted to turn my house into a drug house. I'm not okay with that. I'm also not okay with paying taxes so that I can support somebody's drug habit. He is such a frightening and sadistic sociopath that even though it's my house, I am afraid to live here until he is gone. He has purposely delayed the eviction process, and kept me out of my home for two months. Everybody makes mistakes, but this person is malicious. Believe me, I would have given him a break if he had given me a break, or had any capacity to understand right from wrong. And these aren't "moral and political views". It's the law. The law is very clear on drug use, especially with regards to providing drugs to others. As an attorney, you should know that.

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Asker

Posted over 13 years ago.

If people are going to do drugs and not bother others, then I am even willing to look the other way. But his activities have interfered with my life as well as the lives of others. That's why I want to prosecute. That's the difference between imposing my morals on others, and imposing the laws on others. He is not just my tenant. He is my roommate. Maybe I should have made that clearer. And even if he weren't my roommate, if I am renting a property to a drug dealer, I could face monetary or other liability. These are all good reasons to prosecute.