Pubdate: Sat, 02 Feb 2002 Source: Palm Beach Post (FL) Copyright: 2002 The Palm Beach Post Contact: http://www.gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/333 Author: Michael Van Sickler Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Noelle+Bush Action: Alert #251 Governor Jeb Bush And Tough Drug Law Policies http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0230.html NO JAIL TIME FOR GOVERNOR'S DAUGHTER TALLAHASSEE -- The state attorney's office won't seek jail time for the daughter of Gov. Jeb Bush, after she was arrested this week on a felony charge of prescription drug fraud, State Attorney Willie Meggs said on Friday. Instead of the maximum five years in prison, Noelle Bush, 24, is facing mandatory attendance at a Leon County drug court for up to 18 months, Meggs said. Noelle Bush was arrested early Tuesday after allegedly posing as a doctor in an attempt to purchase the anxiety drug Xanax, Tallahassee police said. Florida law prohibits drug dealers or anyone with prior felony arrests from getting into the program. Drug court requires random drug tests and hearings twice a month before a judge. Noelle Bush's attorney, Peter Antonacci, has yet to agree to drug court, Meggs said. Antonacci did not return repeated phone calls this week. Meggs said his office won't investigate whether Noelle Bush violated the terms of her release from jail Tuesday. "That's something the media is interested in, but we're not," Meggs said. A pretrial release program found that she had no criminal history before allowing her to leave without paying a $1,000 bond. But reports of a 1995 Arizona misdemeanor shoplifting offense involving a woman with the same name and birthdate surfaced this week. A student who attended a Sedona, Ariz., boarding school with Noelle Bush said she was the woman involved. The case concerned the theft of underwear from a JCPenney store and was resolved with the payment of a $305 fine. Also, there were reports of Noelle Bush's spotty driving record. She has been involved in four crashes in Leon County between 1999 and 2001 and has been ticketed more than a dozen times since 1995, records show. According to published reports, she became belligerent after a September 2000 traffic crash that she caused by colliding with a truck. She later told police that she was on prescription pills, the report stated. State Attorney Meggs' stance on Noelle Bush's past is at odds with what the supervisor of the pretrial program said earlier this week. Wanda Hunter, the supervisor, said that inmates are questioned about their criminal pasts and that a national, state, and local crime records search is conducted before release is considered. In Noelle Bush's case, the searches showed no prior arrests, Hunter said. If Noelle Bush had been asked about her criminal background and lied, that would disqualify her from the program and she may be forced to pay the bond, Hunter said Wednesday. She said she would look into the arrest because of the case's high profile. On Thursday, Jackie Cooper, a spokeswoman for Leon County, said she would answer all questions regarding the program and that she would check to see whether Noelle Bush had been asked any questions about her criminal history. On Friday, Cooper said Hunter won't look into the case because inmates aren't asked about their criminal backgrounds. Meggs said he doesn't care whether Noelle Bush was asked about her criminal past. "Did she pull a fraud on us?" he said. "No. Are we going to look into it? No. I think she has enough problems to worry about." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake