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Published June 22, 2009 12:43 pm -
After nearly 2 1/2 years, prosecutors and a New Castle woman resolved a drug case in a way that seems anticlimactic — she was accepted into a diversion program.


UPDATE: Woman put in diversion program


By Joe Pinchot
Herald Staff Writer

HERMITAGE

After nearly 2 1/2 years, prosecutors and a New Castle woman resolved a drug case in a way that seems anticlimactic — she was accepted into a diversion program.

However, the police investigation continues and Santana S. Hightower has agreed to cooperate and testify if any related cases are filed.

Ms. Hightower, 24, was charged Feb. 12, 2007, four days after 31.4 ounces of marijuana, 1è ounces of crack cocaine and drug paraphernalia were found in her hotel room, the former Starlite Inn, 2810 S. Hermitage Road, Hermitage, police said.

In that time, Ms. Hightower switched attorneys three times, had a baby and was a fugitive for a while. Her motion to suppress evidence was withdrawn, refiled, and ultimately denied.

It was evident that prosecutors were less interested in her than they were her boyfriend, Otto C. “Chris” Lane, or anyone else they could connect to the drugs, and wanted Ms. Hightower’s help.

“She was merely present in the room, with a substantial quantity of drugs,” said Assistant Mercer County District Attorney William J. Moder III. “Somebody’s responsible for them.”

Police want to determine who arranged for the drugs to be in the room and who controlled them, Moder said.

Lane initially was charged with drug offenses along with Ms. Hightower, but police early on dropped the case against him for further investigation. They could refile the charges, Moder said.

Hermitage patrolman John Miller testified in March:

He spotted a car pulling into the motel at 5:10 p.m. Feb. 8, 2007. Knowing that the motel had an “extensive problem” with tenants selling drugs, he ran the license plate and found that the car’s owner was wanted on a warrant, but the owner was white and the driver and only occupant was black.

Miller called the owner, who said her husband was supposed to have the car, and asked Miller to get the keys. She said her husband was a recovering crack addict and might have traded the car for drugs, something Miller said is common.

Miller saw Ms. Hightower bringing laundry to the laundry room, and asked her where she got the car. She said she got it from Chip, but that he wasn’t there. Miller asked for the keys and Ms. Hightower said they were in her room.

They walked up to the room together and Ms. Hightower allowed Miller to enter the room when he asked to do so.

Miller saw clothes piled up around the room, food and food containers and an infant and a toddler. He also noticed a “very strong, overpowering smell of (raw) marijuana.”



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