Advertisement Police: Teen admits to panicking, giving teacher pot brownie Broadneck HS teen says teacher asked for brownie piece, so he gave it to her Share Shares Copy Link Copy

An Anne Arundel County high school student admitted to giving his teacher a brownie laced with marijuana.Mobile users tap here for videoSchool officials said the Broadneck High School teacher was taken to the school nurse by a fellow teacher around 1 p.m. Monday after others noticed her feeling ill and acting disoriented.The victim told the School Resource Officer that a student, identified only as a 17-year-old boy from Arnold, had given her a brownie during third period and that she believed it was a pot brownie after she began feeling bad.An ambulance was called and the teacher was treated and released from a local hospital.Police said school officials noticed the 16-year-old girlfriend of the suspected teen also acting lethargic. Both teens were examined and determined to be OK, but they were taken to the office. The 17-year-old admitted that he knew the brownie contained marijuana when he offered it to the teacher, police said.The teen told police that he got scared and panicked when the teacher asked for a piece of the brownie, so he didn't mention it contained marijuana. Police said the boy told them he also gave part of it to his girlfriend."This wasn't a smart day of decision-making here," Anne Arundel County police Lt. T.J. Smith said. "The student relayed to us that he panicked and was scared to tell her it had marijuana in the brownie, and she consumed that brownie."Police said they don't believe anyone else ate the brownie. School officials are asking students not to eat any food from classmates.An e-mail was sent to parents that afternoon explaining what happened and saying that it was believed to be an isolated incident."The thought, first of all, that a student would bring a brownie laced with marijuana to school is difficult to absorb. The fact that the student would provide it to a teacher is even more difficult," Anne Arundel County Public Schools spokesman Bob Mosier said.Police also confirmed there was no ill-intent by the student, but when it comes to the law in this case, that really doesn't matter."You shouldn't even be bringing it to school, so regardless of whether you wanted the teacher to have it or not, you shouldn't have had it in school to begin with, shouldn't be consuming it to begin with," Smith said.The 17-year-old was charged as a juvenile with controlled dangerous substance administer marijuana, CDS distribution, second-degree assault and reckless endangerment. He was released to a guardian.WBAL-TV 11 News reporter Lowell Melser contributed to this report