Alleged Butane Honey Oil Dealer Arrested

Source: Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office

On June 13, 2018, Sheriff’s Special Investigations Bureau (SIB) Detectives concluded an investigation into 30-year-old Dylan Sulit-Swalley who was believed to be selling controlled substances in Santa Barbara. Sulit-Swalley was released from Pelican Bay State Prison in 2017 and placed on parole.

At approximately 3:00 p.m. yesterday, June 13, Sulit-Swalley was contacted in the 300 block of Cabrillo St. in Downtown Santa Barbara. He was detained and a parole search was conducted on his vehicle. During the search of his vehicle he was found to be in possession of heroin, Xanax, suboxone and drug paraphernalia. Sulit-Swalley was taken into custody for the violations of 11350(a) H&S- Possession of a heroin and Xanax, 11375(b)(2) H&S- Possession of RX medications and 11364 H&S- Possession of drug paraphernalia.

Detectives later executed a parole search at Sulit-Swalley’s residence located in the 3800 block of Cinco Amigos in Santa Barbara. During t he search, detectives located three mason jars containing approximately 35.7 oz of concentrated cannabis or Butane Honey Oil, 13.7 oz of Butane Honey Oil packaged for sale in 5 gram vials and over 200 Butane Honey Oil vape pen caps packaged for sale. Sulit-Swalley was then arrested for the violation of 11359 H&S- Possession of concentrated cannabis for sale.

Detectives later discovered Sulit-Swalley was currently out on bail for 459 PC, Burglary. Sulit-Swalley was booked into the Santa Barbara County Jail on the above stated violation and a 3056 PC- Parole hold. He is being held without bail.

Edhat Staff

Written by Edhat Staff

What do you think?

Comments

0 Comments deleted by Administrator

Leave a Review or Comment

3 Comments

  1. Law enforcement does not determine bail or sentencing. That would be up to the courts. Recent laws passed make it near-impossible to keep people incarcerated anymore. This is why this guy, and many others, are walking our streets and leaving havoc and ruined lives in their wake.

  2. I know this person personally since we were children. He had his fair share of problems including drug addiction which fueled all of his criminal acts. He served a very long time of his young adult life in prison and just recently got out. The prison system did nothing to rehabilitate him. I’m not defending what he did that harmed society but I think the bigger picture here is that we need more drug rehabilitation then prison sentanc

Sen. Jackson and Dr. Hutchinson Receive Women of Achievement Awards

Help! Insect Invasion