Former Amherst County High School QB appears in court on drug charges
Peter Rose
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By Chris Dumond
Published: September 2, 2008
AMHERST — Felony drug charges against a former Amherst County High School football star were certified to a grand jury Tuesday during a preliminary hearing in Amherst County General District Court.
Peter Rose, 18, was charged in May with two counts of selling drugs within 1,000 feet of a school. The charges came after a yearlong investigation by an undercover Amherst County sheriff’s deputy posing as a senior at the school.
The deputy’s identity was made public Tuesday when she testified in court. Brooke Hedrick, identified by the sheriff’s office only as being in her 20s, testified she first enrolled in June 2006 during summer school.
“They had a lot of drug complaints at the high school,” Hedrick testified.
Rose, who led the Lancers to back-to-back state titles, was not a target of her investigation, she said. Hedrick said she knew who he was and that she shared an English class with him, but the two had never had a conversation when he approached her in the school parking lot on April 29.
She testified that he asked, “‘Were you looking for some today,’ meaning drugs.”
Within 15 minutes, she said, Rose met her in the McDonald’s parking lot off U.S. 60 in Amherst. He sold her a quarter of an ounce of marijuana for $50, she said.
Then on May 7, she testified, they again met at the McDonald’s, where he sold her another $50 bag, she said.
Both exchanges were video and audio taped, she testified.
On cross-examination by Joseph Sanzone, Rose’s defense lawyer, Hedrick denied that she had set the meeting place. Instead, she said, it was Rose’s idea to meet there.
Investigator Dennie Black testified Hedrick was parked 694 feet away from Amherst Elementary School.
After the hearing, Sanzone said the way the distance from a school is measured could be an issue if Rose is indicted by a grand jury and goes to trial. If the alleged sale had taken place outside the 1,000-foot school zone, the crime would be a misdemeanor, he said.
While questioning Black, Sanzone suggested the distance along the normally traveled route between the school and the restaurant would be much more than 1,000 feet.
Judge Edwin Burnette ruled there was enough evidence to send the case forward. Burnette added that he had researched the question of how distance should be measured in these cases, but could not find any precedent.
Deputy Commonwealth’s Attorney Carey Payne asked the judge to drop two misdemeanor charges of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. Payne said he will bring the lesser charges back to the grand jury, but wanted to avoid procedural confusion between the misdemeanors and felonies Tuesday.
Rose is free on bond. A conviction for selling drugs in a school zone carries a penalty of one to five years in prison.
As the school’s quarterback in 2006 and 2007, he led the Lancers to two state titles. As a senior, the Associated Press and Virginia High School League Coaches Association named him the Virginia Group AA Player of the Year.
He had been recruited to play cornerback at Virginia Tech, but his scholarship offer was revoked after the charges were filed.
Rose’s brother Anthony, a junior, stepped into the role of quarterback for the Lancers this season. The football team has shown support for the Rose family. In the team’s opening scrimmage at William Campbell High School, one player had a towel tucked into his hip pocket that read “4 Rose.”
First-year coach Cecil Phillips said Anthony and the team are using Rose’s troubles as inspiration for this season.
Laura Clark, a staff writer for the New Era-Progress in Amherst, contributed to this report.
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Reader Reactions
Posted by ( ZIGMITCHELL ) on September 03, 2008 at 11:15 am
This is an example to take the most popular kid in school and bust him so all the kids know that selling drugs is not only stupid but illegal…..The kid can play the game no questions ask,but being raised in the hood, dope became a way of life,easy money, the feel good effect (that warps your mind)and not knowing any better ,made him make some bad choices!I do believe in second chances,a lesson to be learned in life,do the crime do the time,but make smarter choices in the future and not let yourself get caught up in such a mess….......
We all have to remember that the choices we make,is the Life we choose to live..The easy way isn’t always the right choice at least when it comes to money or LIFE!
I hope he picks himself up and decides to choose the right path in life, he is young and haves plenty of life left in front of him, he needs to loose the name of DRUG DEALER,and to do that is never ever do it again!!!LIVE LIFE ,Work hard for your $$$$$$$$$$$$$, and respect yourself !!!!Having God in my life has helped me with my journey in life,if you don’t know Him, knock on his door and introduce yourself
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Posted by ( Freedom ) on September 03, 2008 at 11:08 am
laddies,laddies,,(l/burg/dalamama)JUST WHAT PART OF THE LAW dont you understand,,!!if i leave a loaded gun where a teenager can get his hands on,,he does and he kills someone !!waaalllaa,,i,m in court for a feliony…oh ,,oh,,i have another one !!i driving the get a way car,,the idiot i,m drivin,,KILLS a cop !!hey i,m just drivin,,but no the laws says i am copoabble,,for his murder and charged accordingly..SO WERE ARE THEM MEXICAN!!so until there is full justice of the law!!GET TO THE SOURCE!!then i say lets open the silio,s and nuke mex and columbia and et.el.,,then not guilty ,,because we didnt protect our kids,,u know kinda like the kid who shot someone w/my gun,,ahh AND nowhere did i hear where the cops found a pot farm in these kids house,,so quit puffin !!,,lets see how you feel when someone plants illegal drugs on you and calls the cops,,,or your grandkids leaves a bag around and you loose your house,,or one case i read the grandskids were growing the stuff at grannies house,,cause she did,nt know what they were,,and in court ,,i swear to god she told the jury,,they were such pertty plants,,and didnt know,,well well 9/10 tnts of the law is poessions and talk about ged in prison,,you cant get your soc.sec.while in prison!!and i hope you never buy stolen goods at a yard sale,,buying property under legal value is accessory to that crime,, and i have yet to see where entrapment is allowed or implied in the consitution..
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Posted by ( damalama ) on September 03, 2008 at 10:13 am
freedom this is marijuana, it is grown locally, you hear all the time about small operations of small time people growing a few plants in their home.
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Posted by ( damalama ) on September 03, 2008 at 10:11 am
how disgusting for the football team to do that, and how pathetic for the coach to let it happened!!! 1,000 feet or not 1,000 feet, he still was selling drugs there is NO argument about that at all, they are just arguing the distance! and the amherst football team is going to wear stuff supporting a drug dealer!!! well it is amherst country people so nothing is out of the question.
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Posted by ( lburger ) on September 03, 2008 at 9:30 am
I have no sympathy for him. No matter what you think about marijuana, possessing and selling it is illegal. No one made him sell it, and I’m sure the times he sold to the undercover cop were not the only times he sold it. He’s a bad apple, and would likely have gone on to Tech and been the same problem in a different zip code. He can always get his GED in prison, and he should have thought about his future before he committed the crime.
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Posted by ( Freedom ) on September 03, 2008 at 7:58 am
,,like i said all they got to do is apply this at the REAL source,,el paso ,,wash.d.c.,,nyc,fla,the docks/ports..airports(private)etc,,then it would,nt make its way to lynchburg where the city is hundreds and thousands of miles away
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Posted by ( Pinkplanet ) on September 03, 2008 at 5:39 am
He didn’t sell the marijuana on school property and he likely thought the McDonalds was out of the 1000 foot range. I think Amherst County is being way too tough on this young person. I also didn’t like how he along with others were arested about 1 week before school let out. Why couldn’t Amherst county have waited until they finished school and graduated. It was just mean.
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