OOB man faces drug charges
By David Harry
Staff Writer
An Old Orchard Beach man with a May 11 date in
Cumberland County Superior Court in Portland to face drug trafficking charges
also has an April 30 court hearing in Massachusetts for similar charges.
Peter Lorenzen, 40, a Milliken Street resident, was
indicted this month by a Cumberland County grand jury on a charge of
trafficking and two charges of drug possession. The charges stem from a Feb. 13
traffic stop on Pleasant Hill Road in Scarborough.
Lorenzen is already under indictment in Middlesex
County, Mass., on charges of trafficking and conspiracy to traffic drugs,
according to court documents included in his file at Cumberland County Superior
Court.
Records show Lorenzen was stopped by a Scarborough
police officer at 9:35 p.m. on Feb. 13, after an officer noticed a brake light
on Lorenzen’s car was not working. During the stop, the officer discovered
Lorenzen was driving with a suspended license, police said.
A statement by Officer Steven Thibodeau says Lorenzen
appeared nervous and had bloodshot eyes. Thibodeau said Lorenzen initially said
he was not carrying any drugs or weapons but then said he did have a knife in
his pocket.
While searching for the knife, Thibodeau said he
found a pipe Lorenzen said he used for marijuana. After finding the pipe,
Thibodeau said he told Lorenzen the car would be searched.
The search turned up 14 grams of cocaine, 4 ounces of
marijuana, a scale with cocaine residue, drug paraphernalia and a book Thibodeau
said was “what I believed to be a drug ledger.”
Lorenzen, who is unemployed according to court
records, was released on $5,000 bail after his arrest. He returned to jail
March 9 after a drug test showed he had been using cocaine and marijuana, police
said. He has since been released, according to officials at the jail.
Before appearing in Cumberland County Superior Court,
motions to suppress evidence in a case against Lorenzen will be heard April 30
in Middlesex County Superior Court in Woburn, Mass.
Court records detailing Lorenzen’s brushes with the
law show a history of driving violations, including at least six license
suspensions. Lorenzen was also was found guilty of operating under the
influence in 1999, being a habitual offender in 2001 and operating without a
license in 2006.


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