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From:
Darryl Stephen Roy
To:
Date:
Thu, 6 Apr 1995 03:04:12 -0500 (CDT)
Subject:
acid capers
Msg-Id:
<199504060804.DAA27363@chub.owlnet.rice.edu>
Mbox:
idm.9504.gz
From the March/April 1995 edition of Option: What looks like acid but sounds like techno? Philip Gaines Baldwin, 20, of Rockwall, Texas, learned the answer to this riddle the hard way. Last July, Baldwin was driving to see his girlfriend in a nearby town when police stopped him for speeeding. After a search of his car turned up a copy of Plastikman's "Sheet One" album, he was arrested on charges of possessing a controlled substance. The police were displeased by the CD's perforated artwork, which is designed to resemble a sheet of blotter acid. After more than five days in jail, Baldwin was released on $5,000 bail, facing second-degree felony charges which carried a maximum of more than 20 years in prison and $10,000 in fines. Naturally, lab tests proved the CD booklet contained no LSD and the charges were dropped. Richie Hawtin, the brain behind Plastikman, was shoced to learn of the arrest. "I've heard of people pretending the blotter was real and selling it, and I know people who made it real", he says, "so I guess it's ironic that he got picked up and it wasn't." -- Computers are /\ Darryl Roy dsroy@rice.edu /\ Die in your thoughts useless, they //\\ ethno/trance/ethereal radio //\\ every morning and can only give \\// Sun 7-9 am 91.7 fm Houston \\// you will no longer you answers : \/ Picasso Don't rock, Wobble \/ fear Death : Hakakure