"Snip"
http://www.gainesville.com/article/20100223/ARTICLES/2231010/1002?p=2&tc=pg
On Jan. 12, Croslin and Cummings are in the van. Cummings tells the driver he might have Percocet the next day and quotes the amount of money owed for nine pills delivered that day.
The following day, Croslin tells the driver that he owes $190 for 27 pills, but Cummings corrects her and says the cost is $189.
He also asks if the motorist has some "good dope or something" because he likes to get high and then says he'll try to get more pills in the next day or two. Croslin and another person in the vehicle get out, and Cummings tells the driver this isn't a good area they're riding in. "I ain't never scared to swing," he says. Cummings has a concealed weapons permit and usually has a gun, although not that day.
Because people who have watched news interviews know Cummings is armed, he explains he's been the target of false accusations claiming he's threatened others. Cummings made a comment that he would kill the person who took his daughter if he ever finds that person. Now people are using that against them, he says.
"Their first thing was that I was dope boy, and I must have ripped somebody off or pissed somebody off. Dope boys don't come get your kid like that. If owed that much money, they'd come in and they'd kill your (expletive) daughter and your girlfriend and your son."
On Jan. 14, Croslin is in the van, telling the driver to make it look like he's just giving her a ride. She starts telling him about her brother Tommy Croslin and her mother Lisa Croslin's court cases on previous charges, saying they "got off easy."
Lisa Croslin was arrested again last week while her daughter was in court entering a not guilty plea on the trafficking charges. She is accused of
stealing a woman's purse from an area Wal-Mart earlier this year and a warrant was issued for her arrest, said Palatka Police Assistant Chief James Griffith.
The driver tells Croslin he has some prescriptions to get rid of and she says she's "definitely interested." She keeps chatting, saying how she and Cummings now are friends. But, she says, "He's regretting divorcing me."
Croslin says she and Cummings had talked about getting married before Haleigh vanished. Afterward, she says there was worry Cummings would face molestation charges because she was 16 when she started seeing him and the two married but divorced soon afterward. Now, she said, she would wait longer in a relationship before she would marry. "I'm scared of 'I love you,'" she says.
During the final recording, Croslin and Cummings finish counting bags of pills handed to them by the driver when officers jump out from behind the vehicle and start yelling at everyone to get down.