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Man Claimed Fake Drugs at Bonnaroo Were ‘God's Work': PD

James E. Brady allegedly had at the four-day music festival were fake ecstasy, mushrooms, acid, cocaine and heroin

A man accused of bringing more than a thousand doses of fake drugs to the Bonnaroo music festival said he was doing "God's Work" with the bogus substances, Tennessee authorities said Thursday.

The Coffee County Sheriff's Department David E. Brady of Albany, New York, has been charged with two counts of counterfeit controlled substances.

Brady, 45, is accused of attracting the attention of deputies after they spotted what looked like drugs under a tent. The deputies saw Brady toss the item behind him as they approached, and he appeared to have a bag of mushrooms hanging from his waist band as he stood up, a press release from Lucky Knott, a spokesman for the sheriff's department said.

Items Brady brought to the music festival included pills made to look like ecstasy, 22 bags of fake mushrooms, about 1,000 hits of fake acid and counterfeits made to look like cocaine and an incense stick of black tar heroin.

Brady told the deputies that he was doing God's work by selling fake drugs, but the arrest warrant doesn't elaborate.

Brady is being held in the Coffee County Jail. It's not clear if he has a lawyer.

He is wanted in Franklin County, Arkansas, on a felony bench warrant and is also charged with being a fugitive from justice. It's not clear why he's wanted in that state.

Bonnaroo is an annual four-day music festival on a 700-acre farm about 60 miles (97 kilometers) southeast of Nashville.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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