Buyer's Remorse??
Posted on Feb 20, 2016 9:28am PST
Calling the sentence “one of the most troubling that I ever faced
in my five years on the federal bench,” Paul G. Cassell, now a professor
at the University of Utah’s law school, said the mandatory minimum
sentence he was required to impose on Weldon Angelos was one of the chief
reasons he chose to step down as a judge. Consequently, Cassell has beseeched
President Obama for clemency.
“I write you as the judge who sentenced Weldon Angelos to a 55-year
mandatory minimum prison term for non-violent drug offenses,” Cassell
wrote to Obama. “It appears to me that Mr. Angelos meets all of
the criteria for a commuted sentence.” Cassell was appointed to
the bench in 2002 by former President George W. Bush.
Angelos, the son of a Greek immigrant and the 36-year-old father of three,
is one of the nation’s most famous nonviolent drug offenders and
a symbol of the severe mandatory sentences. His case has been widely championed,
including by Utah’s Republican Sen. Mike Lee, former FBI Director
Bill Sessions, the group Families Against Mandatory Minimums and conservative
billionaire Charles Koch.
Angelos was sentenced to 55 years without the possibility of parole after
he sold marijuana to a police informant three times in 2002, each time
charging $350. Prosecutors alleged that Angelos, the founder of Utah hip-hop
label Extravagant, was a gang member and a drug dealer. Angelos denied
the allegations and declined a plea bargain offered by prosecutors. Angelos
never used or pulled a gun, but the informant later testified in court
that he saw one in Angelos’s car during the first buy. He said that
during the second buy, Angelos was wearing an ankle holster holding a
firearm. Officers later searched his home and found a gun.
Federal drug laws require 5- to 30-year mandatory minimum sentences for
possessing, brandishing or discharging a gun during a drug-trafficking
crime. For each subsequent gun conviction, there is a mandatory sentence
of 25 years that must be served consecutively. This is often referred
to as “gun stacking,” which is why Angelos received 55 years
without parole. He received five years for the gun in the car; 25 years
for the second gun charge, having one in an ankle strap; and another 25
years for a third firearms charge, the gun police found in his home. He
got one day for the marijuana.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2016/02/09/former-federal-judge-to-president-obama-free-the-man-i-sentenced-to-55-years-in-prison/