Pubdate: Wed, 11 Sep 2002
Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Copyright: 2002 St. Petersburg Times
Contact:  http://www.sptimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419
Author: Lucy Morgan, Times Tallahassee Bureau Chief
Webpage: http://www.sptimes.com/2002/09/11/State/Police__Cocaine_found.sh
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POLICE: COCAINE FOUND IN NOELLE BUSH'S SHOE

TALLAHASSEE -- Gov. Jeb Bush's 25-year-old daughter, Noelle, was found with 
crack cocaine in her shoe Monday night at a drug treatment center in 
Orlando, police said.

An anonymous patient at the Drug Free Living Center called police about 
8:45 p.m. to report that the staff had caught the governor's daughter with 
drugs.

A white rock weighing 0.2 grams tested positive for cocaine, police said. 
No charges were filed, police said, because such complaints are generally 
reported by the treatment center directly to the judge who supervises the 
program.

Center staff members said they talked with Bush after receiving several 
complaints from residents about her, the report stated. Employee Julia 
Elias searched Noelle Bush and "found a small white rocklike substance in 
Bush's shoe," the report states. A center staff member who had been filling 
out a statement for police ripped up the document and threw it into a trash 
can after talking to a supervisor, but the officer retrieved the torn paper 
and tagged it as evidence, said police spokeswoman Teresa Shipley. Its 
contents weren't released.

Noelle Bush was assigned to the program in January after she was arrested 
on charges of trying to obtain Xanax with a fraudulent prescription.

The police report said "no further action will be taken in this case," but 
Circuit Judge Reginald Whitehead, who supervises the drug program, could 
send her to jail or throw her out of the program when she appears before 
him Friday.

This is Noelle Bush's second drug problem since entering the program. 
Whitehead sent her to jail for three days in July after she was found with 
a prescription drug.

If she is tossed out of the program, she would return to Leon County and 
face the original prescription charge, which is a felony. If she 
successfully completes the program, the charges would be dropped.

The governor was advised of the situation Tuesday between a campaign rally 
at Republican Party headquarters in Tallahassee and a Cabinet meeting.

"This is a private issue as it relates to my daughter and myself and my 
wife," Bush said appearing shaken and drawn. "The road to recovery is a 
rocky one for a lot of people who have this kind of problem."

In a written statement issued a short time later, Bush said he and his 
family "love Noelle very much and continue to pray for her continued 
progress." He asked Floridians "to respect our privacy during this 
difficult time."

The governor and his wife, Columba, already were scheduled to travel to 
Orlando on Tuesday afternoon. They were to spend the night and visit with 
their daughter. He also had planned to suspend campaign activities today in 
honor of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Noelle Bush's older brother, George P. Bush, accompanied her to court in 
July and told reporters that the family was trying to use "tough love" to 
pull her through a painful problem.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart