Gainesville man arrested on drug trafficking charges on last day of probation

Staff report

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Henry Maurice Hall Jr., 28, was arrested yesterday for possession of trafficking quantities of substitute cathinone; his drug offender probation was scheduled to end the same day.

At about 7:56 p.m. on May 22, an Alachua County Sheriff’s Deputy conducted a traffic stop at the Maa & Paa Store (6410 SW 8th Avenue) for illegal window tint and failure to wear a seatbelt.

The deputy reported that when Hall saw the patrol car, he quickly drove around multiple vehicles, parked, and opened his door to get out, in an apparent effort to distance himself from law enforcement.

The deputy also reported that Hall showed signs of extreme nervousness, and Hall and his vehicle smelled like marijuana.

Hall reportedly provided his medical marijuana card and said he had marijuana in a dispensary container; he gave deputies consent to inspect the container, and deputies reported that the label said it had expired in 2025. Hall reportedly said he had put new marijuana in the older container, which is not a legal way of packaging medical marijuana.

While another deputy was speaking with Hall, he reported that a bag containing a chunky white powdery substance dropped from Hall’s shorts onto the ground, and that deputy detained Hall in handcuffs.

The deputy also reported that Hall kicked at a receipt near his foot “in a clear effort to destroy and/or conceal the evidence” under a patrol car, and the deputy reportedly found another large chunk of the white substance inside the receipt.

The white substance tested positive for substitute cathinone (phenethylamine) and weighed a total of about 15 grams, above the trafficking threshold of 10 grams.

Post Miranda, Hall reportedly said he “froze,” and he said the substance was for personal use. He also admitted that he had not been wearing his seatbelt.

Hall has been charged with possession of trafficking quantities of phenethylamines, tampering with evidence, and possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana. He has 10 felony convictions (one violent) and six misdemeanor convictions; he has served one state prison sentence and was released in 2024. He is on drug offender probation that was scheduled to terminate on May 22, 2026. Judge Craig DeThomasis set bail at $18,500.

Articles about arrests are based on reports from law enforcement agencies. The charges listed are taken from the arrest report and/or court records and are only accusations. All suspects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. 

      • 20*365*$81/day=$591,300
        Florida’s per diem cost was approximately $81 per day (~$29,692 annually) per inmate at state-run facilities. This covers security, health services, and education — but excludes debt service costs.

        • That’s ok. Put a lien on him if he gets an inheritance or wins the lottery…make him pay back the taxpayers when he gets out in 20years…

        • It is likely he would do far more than $591,300 in damage to innocent victims and the struggling community on SW 8th Avenue in the next 20 years if free in the community to keep vending drugs. And you forgot to include the cost of free phone calls out at the jail and multiple public defenders.

          • Exactly and he’ll leave prison at 48. Then what? More mayhem?
            Possibly treatment or another intervention.

  • If tint was so dark it required stop, how did officer see seat belt violation and How at 8PM at night Officer see Tint was not simply evening darkness. Perhaps Driving While Black

    • Maybe the young scholar had his window down and it was easy to see the seatbelt violation and t g e rest of the windows were dark tinted. And if the tint was dark how would the deputy know the race of the driver? There are different types of window tint violations such as the length of tint on the front windshield or the actual tint level.stop making excuses for these criminals. Anyone who is gets arrested on the very day probation ends is just stupid. He never stopped committing crime just like the majority of the people given the weak probation status in this judicial circuit.

    • He was most likely stopped for the window tint violation, and the seat belt violation was discovered afterward. Both are traffic violations that allow law enforcement to pull you over. The real question is why Mr. Hall was committing felonies instead of trying to pull his life together. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes…

  • After reading the comments outside of this post involves family members and friends of this man. They want him to be freed. Well, maybe they should’ve intervened when he was dealing and using while on probation. This consequence is on HIM. Not his parole officer or the officer that stopped him. It’s time start taking responsibility of their actions.

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