A Florida man with the last name “Cocaine” was arrested for allegedly threatening employees in a subway restaurant in Knifepoint after he was upset by his “bad attitudes,” Cops said.
Edward Cocaine, 45, was arrested over the weekend after he allegedly overturned in a meter in Brevard County while trying to ask for food with a friend.
Cocaine caused an argument with employees about what he thought was a bad customer service, which quickly intensified after having advanced on the counter, pushed one of the employees and took out a knife, said Brevard County Seriff.

The client who pushes the knife was possible that his friend was spoken by his friend and both left the restaurant, according to the sheriff.
No employee were injured, but the local authorities were soon notified about the alleged threats. Metro employees delivered the security images, who captured each cocaine movement made in the store, police said.
Sheriff’s agents brought cocaine and their friend to be interviewed shortly after. The cocaine was able to confirm that the man in the security images was him and admitted that “crossed the line” when he took out the knife, according to a publication in the Office of the Sheriff of Brevard Facebook County.
“In New York, they arrest you for defending people in the subway … but in Brevard County you will locate you to attack people in a meter!” Sheriff Wayne Ivey wrote in the publication.
“Clearly, this guy, Edward Cocaine, (and yes, that is his real name) he does not know in Brevard County, if you get, you will find out …
Ivey pointed out that the memory of the cocaine situation “seemed to be a bit off.”

Thus, the cocaine was accused of two positions of aggravated assault, theft with assault or aggression and aggression, which the Sheriff said that it leads to “Ivey’s Iron Bar Lodge”.
“He can have food in our 1 star dining facilities that is recently prepared every day in our kitchen by inmates … Sounds simply delicious!” Ivey wrote.
“So, what have friends learned here … First of all, they don’t get into Brevard county unless he is ready to spend the night in jail with some new friends and while eat less than subsisis!”
In 2014, cocaine was accused of possession of drugs and almost laughed at the Court Chamber after a dumbfounded judge struggled to wrap her head by the unusual last name.
“How many times have you told you the police to get out of your life in your life?” The judge asked him for his reading of charges.
“Almost every time they stop,” said Cocaine, who at that time was accused of having Xanax, not the illegal white dust.