Deputies: Teen after pot steals tomato plant instead near Holly Hill 
By LYDA LONGA, Staff writer 
  February 17, 2012 12:50 AM 
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Call it a case of mistaken plant identity. 
 
A 15-year-old boy climbed into Angela Cartwright's kitchen window thinking to 
make off with a marijuana plant, but instead the young thief was actually 
stealing a potted tomato plant, a sheriff's arrest report shows. 
 
As he was running from Cartwright's house on Carmen Avenue near Holly Hill on 
Feb. 10 just after 7 a.m., the teen even yelled at Cartwright, "See, I have one 
of your pot plants!" the arrest report states. 
 
Cartwright had arrived at her residence that morning after leaving her 
6-year-old son off at the school bus stop. When she walked into her home she 
saw a teenager whose torso was inside her kitchen window and the other half of 
his body was hanging outside, the report shows. 
 
When Cartwright yelled, "Hey!" the suspect jumped back and bolted, the potted 
tomato plant in hand. 
 
"I chased him and I yelled out, "You stupid little brat, it's a tomato plant!" 
Cartwright said Thursday. 
 
The teen gave Cartwright the slip, but Wednesday morning as Cartwright and a 
friend walked Cartwright's son to the bus stop, they spotted the teenager a 
second time, the report shows. 
 
The boy was wearing the same clothes Cartwright had seen on him five days 
earlier, she said. 
 
"I said to my friend, 'That's him,' " Cartwright said. "It looked like he was 
going to hide from me, but then he stayed there." 
 
According to the report and Cartwright, the boy, who The Daytona Beach 
News-Journal is not identifying because of his age, admitted to stealing the 
tomato plant, valued at under $5. 
 
"He seemed like a nice kid," Cartwright said. "It almost seemed as if he wanted 
to get caught." 
 
While Cartwright, her friend and the teen waited for a deputy to arrive at the 
bus stop, the 35-year-old mother took the opportunity to give a lecture. 
 
"I gave him the 'mother lecture,' " Cartwright said. "He listened and I told 
him he should be in school." 
 
The teen was charged with unarmed burglary of an occupied dwelling, his first 
offense, the report states. 
 
When interviewed, the young suspect told a lawman the same thing -- he broke 
into Cartwright's house thinking he was getting away with a marijuana plant, 
the report shows. 
 
"It wasn't pot, it was just Walmart tomatoes," Cartwright said with a laugh. 
 
The teen was taken to the Volusia Regional Juvenile Detention Center in Daytona 
Beach.                                    

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