Pubdate: Mon, 23 May 2011 Source: Daily Camera (Boulder, CO) Copyright: 2011 The Daily Camera. Contact: http://www.dailycamera.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103 Author: Vanessa Miller, Camera Staff Writer BOULDER POLICE: WOMAN SMOKED POT WITH INFANT IN CAR, FACES CHILD-ABUSE CHARGE A homeless woman from Denver faces child abuse and drug charges after Boulder police stopped her in the Alfalfa's Market parking lot and noticed an odor of marijuana inside her vehicle while her baby was in the back seat. Officers had been called to the grocery store at 909 Arapahoe Ave. around 9:45 p.m. Friday on a report of an unrelated assault, according to a police report, and they noticed a car backing out of a space with fogged-up windows. An officer yelled for the driver to stop and roll down the windows, and the woman -- later identified as Caitlin Rose Blakeslee, 20 -- complied, according to the report. She had two male passengers -- one in the front and one in the back -- along with the infant, police reported. "I also immediately observed a strong odor of marijuana coming from the car," Boulder police Officer Beth McNalley wrote in her report. Blakeslee had slow and slurred speech, her tongue had blisters and greenish residue on it, and her eyes were bloodshot, according to the report. She initially denied smoking marijuana, but later admitted to having smoked about a half hour earlier outside the vehicle and away from the baby. At first, Blakeslee, said she had a medical marijuana license, but didn't have her card on her. She later said she had applied for one, but still had not received it, according to police. She didn't have papers showing she had applied for a medical marijuana license, police reported, and she told the officers that, "Pot is not a drug ... it's medicine ... it's just a plant." Police reported that Blakeslee giggled the whole time they spoke with her and that she told them, "I am Buddhist, and I feel I am being attacked. Marijuana is a plant and not a drug ... I smoke it for the pain of taking the government's chemicals." Her two passengers -- identified as Michael Hunter and Eli Josephs -- said they didn't have medical marijuana licenses and turned over two pipes and two containers filled with marijuana, police reported. They were not arrested. Blakeslee, who said she was in the parking lot to use the Boulder Public Library's free WiFi, was booked in to the Boulder County Jail at 3:52 a.m. on suspicion of child abuse, possession of marijuana, driving under the influence of drugs and operating an uninsured vehicle. She gave police the names of her parents, who live in Nederland, and said they would come pick up the baby. Officer McNalley took the child back to the Boulder Police Department, where she noticed a small bruise on the infant's forehead, according to the report. When Blakeslee's parents arrived at the police department, they said "they have been disappointed with the situation Caitlin was in, and the choices she was making." "They said they were more than happy to care for (the infant) as long as it would take," McNalley wrote. The child's grandparents said they were pleased the police were going to notify the Boulder County Department of Housing and Human Services about the situation, but said they "adamantly" believed that their daughter didn't cause the bruise on the child's head, according to the report. When a Camera reporter called the phone number that Blakeslee gave police, her mother answered and refused to comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.