12-09-2004, 10:30 PM
|
|
|
Confirmed User
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 2,754
|
First-Time Marijuana Seller Gets 55-Year Sentence
Check out this alert I just got from the Liberator.
First-Time Marijuana Seller Gets 55-Year Sentence
On November 16, Utah Judge Paul G. Cassell gave a 22-year sentence to a
murderer who beat an elderly woman to death with a log.
Two hours later, he sentenced nonviolent, first-time-offender Weldon
Angelos, age 24, to 55 years and a day in essence, a life sentence.
Weldon?s crime? Selling a small amount of marijuana to a Utah
undercover policeman.
How was this possible? It was yet another horror story created by
America?s savage mandatory minimum sentencing laws, imposed by Congress
during the ?get tough on drugs? mania that seized Congress in the 1980s.
Angelos wore a small pistol in an ankle holster when he sold the
marijuana. Although he didn?t use, threaten to use, or brandish the weapon,
that triggered the federal mandatory minimum laws, and sent his sentence
skyrocketing.
Angelos? mandatory 55 years is based on three firearms-related charges:
for carrying a gun during two drug sales and for keeping additional
firearms at his apartment. Federal law require a five-year
mandatory-minimum sentence for the first charge and a 25-year term for each count
thereafter.
Under federal law, Judge Cassell had no choice but to impose the 55
years.
Cassell is no softie on crime. He?s a Bush appointee, former
prosecutor, and death penalty advocate.
But he was horrified by what the law forced him to do to Weldon
Angelos. So horrified, in fact, that he wrote a 67-page memorandum denouncing
the mandatory sentencing and asking Bush to commute the sentence to a
more reasonable (in his mind) 18 years.
Under federal law, Judge Cassell noted, an airplane hijacker would get
24 years. A bomb-detonating terrorist would get a 19-year sentence. A
three-time child rapist would get 15 years.
"Is there a rational basis for giving Mr. Angelos more time than the
hijacker, the murderer, the rapist?" Judge Cassell wrote. ?To sentence
Mr. Angelos to prison for the rest of his life is unjust, cruel, and even
irrational."
A respected and growing body of individuals and organizations, from
across the political spectrum, oppose mandatory sentencing laws. A few:
* U.S. Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist
* Former attorney general Edwin Meese
* Former FBI director Louis Freeh
* Former drug czar Barry McCaffrey
* The American Bar Association
* The National Association of Veteran Police Officers
* The National Council of La Raza
* The American Psychological Association
* The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
* The Federal Courts Study Committee
* The American Civil Liberties Union
* The U.S. Sentencing Commission
* Each of the 11 Federal Judicial Circuits
The Angelos case is bringing some well-deserved attention to the
horrors and injustice of these barbaric laws.
But a libertarian analysis of the case goes much further than that. Two
simple questions: Why should it be a crime to sell marijuana in the
first place? And why should it be illegal to exercise your Second
Amendment right to keep and bear arms while engaged in peaceful, consensual
commercial activities?
(Sources: FAMM -- Families Against Mandatory Minimums:
http://www.famm.org/index2.htm )
* * *
__________________
Alt Journals, Blogs for Perverts!
Fitness and nutrition writer, and UNIX/Linux Sys Ad in training
"Just as a man who has fallen into a heap of filth ought to seek the great pond of water covered with lotuses, which is near by: even so seek thou for the great deathless lake of Nirvana to wash off the defilement of wrong. If the lake is not sought, it is not the fault of the lake."
|
|
|