Sooo these guys stole a person’s pot brownies, ate them, and typed a message on their WORK computers talking about how high they were. And these are the people that are supposed to protect us?! SMH. I know there are a lot of hard-working, good cops out there but all these stories in the media we read every day aren’t a good look! We have to do better!! Read the full story after the jump…

Wendy L.

Two Houston police officers could be asking “dude, where’s my credibility?” after a suspect accused them of eating his pot brownies.

Nicholas Hill, 19, claims that Houston cops took his brownies, that they knew were laced with marijuana, and munched away after arresting the teen for pot possession.

ABC 13 found something more substantial than just Hill’s claim. The station reports that it has obtained messages typed by the officers on their in-car computers after confiscating and consuming the baked goods.

“So HIGH… Good munchies,” one officer supposedly wrote. “Everything should be open when we get done,” the other responded.

One of Hill’s defense attorneys, Daniel Cahill, told The Huffington Post that, if his client’s accusations prove to be true, they could have very serious consequences.

“If what is alleged is true then it really calls into question everything that went on that day,” Cahill said. “If we have police destroying evidence or maybe not following the rules that they need to be following, that brings into question the integrity of the system and everything these guys have done, possibly.”

Houston Police Department spokesperson John Cannon told HuffPost that the department would not speculate on what penalties the officers would face if the accusations are found to be accurate.

“HPD is looking into the matter and will conduct a thorough investigation,” Cannon said.

The officers remain on active duty while the investigation takes place, according to Cannon.

Cahill said that, until the investigation is finished, it’s unclear what will happen with his client’s case.

“We’re waiting on the investigation before we can really move,” he said. “We’re stuck in a holding pattern.”

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