Updated Story, April 9, 2019:

Takera McClendon was sentenced to three years of probation after she pleaded to one count of selling synthetic cannabinoids on April 9, according to court records. In addition, McClendon must complete 150 hours of community service and a complete substance abuse evaluation, according to her plea agreement.

Original Story:

DELRAY BEACH -- A Boynton Beach woman has been charged with selling edible marijuana online after handing a police officer a bag containing 3 pounds of THC-laced baked goods, according to Delray Beach police reports.



Takera Marshay McClendon, 30, was booked Jan. 16 at the Palm Beach County Jail, charged with trafficking in synthetic cannabinoids of 280 grams or more, a felony under Florida law. She left jail Jan. 17 after posting a $5,000 bond.

According to a report, city police got an anonymous tip Nov. 13 that McClendon was advertising edible marijuana on social media.

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The police report said a detective posing as a buyer called McClendon and ordered $240 worth of items. It said McClendon suggested the buyer pay through an "app," but the detective asked to pay in cash.

It said McClendon got the cash Nov. 13 at an office complex on Congress Avenue in northern Boca Raton. McClendon met the detective Nov. 14 near the Delray Beach Tennis Center on Atlantic Avenue and handed over a paper bag full of marijuana cookies and brownies, the report said.



The police report, dated Jan. 7, said the items were sent to a Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office lab for analysis. It later came back positive for tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, marijuana’s active ingredient, in the items, which in total weighed 1,387 grams, or about 3 pounds.

A telephone number for McLendon in the police report was disconnected. Her lawyer, Robert Pasch of West Palm Beach, said Tuesday he did not want to comment on the open charges.

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The police report said the original caller had "expressed their concern that McClendon is involved with youth programs run through the city of Delray Beach and should not be involved in these types of illegal activities." The city said Tuesday it has no record of McClendon as either an employee or volunteer.

Pasch said Tuesday he believes McClendon no longer has any association with the city. A 2015 article in the South Florida Sun Sentinel reported that McClendon had been cheerleading since age 8 and started coaching juniors when she was 16, and that a family member then led the cheerleading squad that practiced at the city's Pompey Park.

Staff researcher Melanie Mena contributed to this story.