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DamianTV
12-17-2013, 04:46 PM
It shouldnt come as any suprise that its a Drug Related Charge.

https://www.aclu.org/blog/criminal-law-reform/i-will-die-here-unless-president-obama-helps


I joined a drug ring when I was 17 years old and, for just over a year, sold crack and powder cocaine in Rockford, Ill. I was arrested when I was 19 years old.

I am now 39 years old. I have spent over half of my life in federal prison. I have been gone from a world that witnessed the advent of smartphones, digital cameras, and GPS technology. More personally, I have been gone from my family. I have missed 20 years of graduations, funerals, and carved turkeys for the holidays. For my very first conviction, I paid with the entire balance of my freedom.

And I am destined to die here, unless President Obama commutes my life without parole sentence. Presidential pardons are usually handed out the week of December 22nd. There are thousands who think it's time I went home.

Two decades ago, I stood before a federal judge who reluctantly sentenced me to life in prison. Everyone in the courtroom – the prosecutor, the judge, my lawyer – said the sentence was too harsh. But the federal formula was unwavering: it required exponentially harsher penalties for crack offenses, compared to offenses exclusively involving powder cocaine. My life sentence is the product of an unjust legal formula that has since been abandoned.

I do not deny the devastating effects of drug addiction. I know those effects firsthand. Both of my parents were drugs addicts. When I was 11 years old, I found my mother dead from a heroin overdose. I was sent to live with my grandmother, who herself was a well-known Rockford cocaine dealer. I was raised in a crack and prostitution house where adult family members taught me how to cook, package and sell cocaine. My childhood does not excuse my crime. It only explains the road I have traveled.

My clemency petition raises one fundamental question: is permanent banishment from society the only answer for a teenager who, with no prior convictions, joins a drug ring and spends a little over a year peddling crack and powder cocaine? I believe the answer is no. Rehabilitation is possible. I have a 20-year record of achievement to prove it. Even in the face of a mandatory life sentence, I have spent the last 20 years working to grow from an immature boy to a productive man. I have completed a 4,100 hour teaching apprenticeship to become a U.S. Department of Labor certified Teacher's Aide. I am a certified victim impact counselor. I am a companion for the inmate suicide prevention program. I teach in the Federal Bureau of Prisons reentry program, which prepares inmates for successful community reentry.

The person I have grown into is my way of apologizing to everyone I have ever wronged.

My clemency petition does not ask President Obama to rewrite constitutional law or legislate policy with the presidential pen. Congress and the Supreme Court have recently recognized that unjust mechanisms were a part of the federal sentencing machinery that resulted in my life sentence. Legislatively, the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 is a bipartisan rejection of the unwarranted disparity between crack and powder sentences. Judicially, the Supreme Court, in Miller v. Alabama, said that it is unconstitutional to sentence any juvenile – even a juvenile murderer – to a mandatory life sentence.

Regardless of whether I am a juvenile offender by legal definition, the basic principles of Miller certainly apply. I am serving a life sentence for a drug crime that began and ended when I was just a teenager. If the Constitution prohibits a life sentence for juvenile murderers, then why must I die in prison for a first-time, nonviolent drug offense?

With each passing day, the constitutional and penological justifications further erode from the compulsory life sentences for thousands of nonviolent drug offenders like me. Both the federal judge who sentenced me and the prosecutor's office support my commutation. My request to President Obama contained the signatures of thousands of ordinary Americans, over 50 law schools, and numerous public servants and mobilized organizations, all of whom support commutation.

This holiday season, please help me get home. You can take action here to help me and the thousands of other people destined to die behind bars for nonviolent drug and property crimes. (https://www.aclu.org/life-without-parole?ms=web_acluaction_lwop_131113)

If theres any interest in this thread, I'll pop back in later to express my opinions. But for now, how would any sensible person in a Free and Responsible Society handle this situation?

kathy88
12-17-2013, 04:59 PM
I am suddenly so damned sad... That poor man.

Christian Liberty
12-17-2013, 05:04 PM
It shouldnt come as any suprise that its a Drug Related Charge.

https://www.aclu.org/blog/criminal-law-reform/i-will-die-here-unless-president-obama-helps



If theres any interest in this thread, I'll pop back in later to express my opinions. But for now, how would any sensible person in a Free and Responsible Society handle this situation?

Only an idiot would say that what he did should be a crime at all, let alone a Federal crime.

aGameOfThrones
12-17-2013, 05:07 PM
Seems fair. His crime is worst than a cop killing a former school teacher or a wood caver or a homeless man.

Philhelm
12-17-2013, 05:11 PM
If I were your king I would set about pardoning men such as him, not on December 22, but on the hour of my coronation. Those involved in imprisoning him (judge, prosecution, police), if alive, would serve the remainder of his sentence.

tod evans
12-17-2013, 05:15 PM
If theres any interest in this thread, I'll pop back in later to express my opinions. But for now, how would any sensible person in a Free and Responsible Society handle this situation?

Cut him loose.

dannno
12-17-2013, 05:24 PM
Ridiculous that he has been there that long and ridiculous that he thinks he actually committed a crime.

pcosmar
12-17-2013, 05:46 PM
Just one of so many stories. :(

kcchiefs6465
12-17-2013, 06:17 PM
Ridiculous that he has been there that long and ridiculous that he thinks he actually committed a crime.
Whether or not he actually thinks that is unknown.

To even be considered for parole you have to accept responsibility for the crime you were convicted of and show remorse. The man is trying to win his freedom. He isn't going to say he did nothing wrong. He would lose all sympathy from a large amount of Americans and from the president as well. Not that the president is going to pardon the man in any case.

libertarianMoney
12-17-2013, 06:38 PM
I think the saddest part is watching a man have to beg Obama despite his life being unjustly stolen from him.

It makes me sick to my stomach.

"And I am destined to die here, unless President Obama commutes my life without parole sentence."

I really hope that he's wrong.

kcchiefs6465
12-19-2013, 11:22 PM
Bump.

ETA: After looking, I am very surprised this man's sentence was commuted. One million more to go.

Mani
12-20-2013, 12:49 AM
So Obama is a king and has to beg the throne and kiss his ring to be pardoned for his crimes he committed as a teenager? Which involved no death, murder, or violent crime?



How is our justice system this fucked up?



This could be Donald Driver.


Donald Driver was poor and homeless and sold drugs and stole cars to survive in his teens. Luckily he found football and turned his life around, but the kid was not a bad apple, just had no means to survive and put food on the table for himself and his family.

And in a long winding road he eventually made it to the NFL, has been a shining beacon of light of hope and love and he constantly spreads his message and works tirelessly in charities and events and makes differences in people's lives. He's made a positive difference in the lives of so many people and has raised so many thousands of dollars for charities, and even has a end the homeless program where he builds homes for homeless people. He's done so much good in this world. Anyone who reads his story gets touched and can't help but feel good for what he's been through and what he's now accomplished.


Yet this could be Donald Driver. If he had been caught in a similar manner and had his life thrown away. And the thousands of lives he's helped through all his work would have never happened.

There are good people in this world that committed nonviolent crimes to survive in this world. I don't think their lives should be ruined, and what world is this where everyone's hands are tied and the only one that can salvage their lives is in the power of the mighty supreme leader.