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Why does it seem like every major world leader or state leader is all on cocaine recently?
Are they ALL coked out of their minds?
If so, perhaps this is starting to explain why our world is so messed up….and why President Trump stands alone as the sole voice of reason. He’s not completely strung out on drugs!
Anyway, I have no idea if this lady is a big old cokehead or not.
Heck, until about 10 minutes ago, I had no idea who the Mayor of Maine even was.
But I did find this video of her being confronted on the street pretty hilarious:
WATCH: Maine Democrat Governor Janet Mills when asked about her alleged cocaine use and if sniffing cocaine at work a “human right”:
“What the fuck.” https://t.co/7GXGbmKl4K pic.twitter.com/hz00aLHTTg
— Steve Guest (@SteveGuest) July 1, 2025
Here’s more, from Fox News:
Maine Democrat Gov. Janet Mills was at a loss for words last month during a trip to the nation’s capital when pressed about her alleged cocaine use.
“What the f—?” Mills replied when asked if “sniffing cocaine at work” is a “human right.”
Mills refused to answer the question, which was followed by, “How much more does an eight-ball cost with inflation?” Mills ignored the second question and continued walking.
A source shared the video with Fox News Digital after reporting Friday revealed the Department of Justice contradicted Mills’ decades-old claim that the investigation over her alleged cocaine use was politically motivated.
In early 1990, the U.S. Attorney’s Office (USAO) in Maine, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and Maine’s Bureau of Intergovernmental Drug Enforcement (BIDE) investigated Mills, then a sitting district attorney in Maine, after a drug suspect accused her of using cocaine.
The investigation was eventually dropped without charges being filed. Mills has maintained that the investigation never had any merit and that she was politically targeted for her Democratic affiliation and criticism of BIDE. In 1990, she and two other district attorneys in Maine criticized BIDE for inflating arrest numbers through excessive enforcement of low-level drug offenders.
“It’s scary,” Mills told the Portland Press Herald in November 1991. “Maine apparently has a secret police force at work that can ruin the reputation of any who opposes it.”
A March 1995 memorandum from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Professional Responsibility (DOJ/OPR), addressed to the deputy attorney general – Merrick Garland was serving as the principal associate deputy attorney general – and unearthed by Fox News Digital, refutes Mills’ claim. It revealed that there was no misconduct by federal or state authorities investigating her case.
According to the DOJ memo, WCSH-TV reported in December 1990 that Mills was being investigated by a federal grand jury for drug use, citing law enforcement sources. Mills later sued that reporter for libel and slander. The report also prompted Mills’ attorney to demand a grand jury investigation, arguing that “the press received leaks from BIDE law enforcement officials.”
The results of the libel and slander suit are no longer available. The docket for the case showed that the records were disposed of in 2015 in accordance with policy. However, a 1991 Lewiston Sun-Journal article appears to state that the effort to “end drug probe rumors” was thrown out by a judge.
A different Fox News article describes how these allegations have dogged her since the 1990s:
Maine’s Democratic Gov. Janet Mills has for years dismissed an investigation into her alleged cocaine use as politically motivated, but a newly unearthed memo obtained by Fox News Digital contradicts her decades-old claim.
In early 1990, the U.S. Attorney’s Office (USAO) in Maine, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and Maine’s Bureau of Intergovernmental Drug Enforcement (BIDE) investigated Mills, then a sitting district attorney in Maine, after a drug suspect accused her of using cocaine.
The investigation was eventually dropped without charges being filed, but Mills has maintained that the investigation never had any merit and that she was politically targeted for her Democratic affiliation and criticism of BIDE. In 1990, she and two other district attorneys in Maine criticized BIDE for inflating arrest numbers through excessive enforcement of low-level drug offenders.
“It’s scary,” Mills told the Portland Press Herald in November 1991. “Maine apparently has a secret police force at work that can ruin the reputation of any who opposes it.”
A March 1995 memorandum from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Professional Responsibility (DOJ/OPR), addressed to the Deputy Attorney General, of whom Merrick Garland was an associate serving as the principal associate Deputy Attorney General, unearthed by Fox News Digital, refutes Mills’ claim, revealing there was no misconduct by federal or state authorities investigating her case.
What do you think?
This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport.