Florida Woman Tweets For Weed And Gets Witty Reply From Cops

A Florida woman publicly asked for some weed on popular social media platform Twitter and her local sheriff's office responded.

The woman is named @Rosa_Sparkz, listing her name on Twitter as "Goddess," and apparently she was in need of some pot. While normally you'd think someone looking for pot is a bit more discreet, the woman made a plea on a social network for everyone to see.

"Somebody bring me weed. I'll pay for it," wrote the woman in a Twitter post. Within an hour, she received a reply from the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office (PBSO).

"Where should we meet you," read the tweet from the PBSO's official Twitter account.

Understandably, others who stumbled upon the woman's tweet and the reply from the authorities had a good laugh, and the whole conversation quickly went viral. The woman didn't panic, however, like many probably would if deputies answered their plea for pot.

Instead, Rosa Sparkz (not her real name) even replied to the PBSO telling them to follow her back so she can send them her location via direct message (DM).

At the time of writing, the PBSO's response to Rosa Sparkz plea for weed was retweeted 53,283 times and favorited 45,298 times. With the tweets going viral and increasingly more people commenting on them, Sparks seems to be enjoying the buzz and the unexpected notoriety.

Deep Commotion obtained an exclusive interview with Rosa Sparks regarding her sudden social media fame over a weed tweet.

"When it went viral I got really excited. I was having a pretty boring night after work but this definitely Sparked some life to my night," the woman tells Deep Commotion.

Sparks further says she's definitely not sorry for posting the original tweet that caught the PBSO's attention, on the contrary. She's enjoying her five minutes of fame.

The police department has apparently responded to the woman's tweet as a joke, as it has not taken any measures against her. Sparks says the police has not contacted her after that tweet, and didn't follow her back either.

The Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office has not made any comment nor posted additional tweets in regards to this "incident."

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