Jimmy Romans made a lot of money
selling marijuana. It cost him everything. Is the federal government willing to
call it even?
It was a Monday morning in
mid-June, the day after Father’s Day 2011, when Jimmy Romans was indicted by
the federal government for selling marijuana.
He had been part of a network of
friends from the west side of Indianapolis that had distributed thousands of
pounds of weed in the area between 2006 and 2010. Jimmy was a wholesaler, a
middleman, supplying a few select retailers with bulk amounts of product. Ten
months prior, in August of 2010, one of those retailers had been pinched with a
pillow of pot by the Indiana State Police and offered a deal: turn confidential
informant or take the rap for what’s in the trunk. A few weeks later, ISP had
Jimmy on tape financing the deal of 24 pounds of weed.
The maximum penalty under Indiana
law for dealing more than 10 pounds of marijuana was eight years. The
prosecutor offered Jimmy a better option: plead guilty to the Class C felony
and agree not to contest any of the property the police had seized—which was
already sitting in a warehouse ready to be sold at the next county auction—and
in return he could do two years in a work-release facility. The decision was a
no-brainer.
Despite the events of the
previous 10 months—Jimmy’s wife had filed for divorce a few months after his
arrest—he was in high spirits that Monday morning in mid-June. The tall, skinny
redhead was two months from being a free man—good behavior and clean drug tests
had cut his sentence in half—and he’d spent the previous afternoon visiting at
home with his parents and three children. It almost felt like old times.
Jimmy swung by the small place he
was renting, like he did every morning on his way to work. He had just let the
dog out when he heard a commotion from outside. Jimmy opened the door to see
two van loads of federal agents leaping onto the lawn and charging toward the
front porch.
“Hey, here I am,” Jimmy said,
clueless. “I’m on work release. I haven’t done anything wrong.”
The agents told him about an
indictment coming out of Texas.
“Texas?” he said. “I’ve never
even been to Texas.”
Jimmy didn’t know it yet, and he
wouldn’t fully understand for nearly two years, but he’d just been tossed into
the rapids of the federal criminal justice system without a life vest.
Jimmy Romans began selling
marijuana for the same reason as anyone who enters the drug game: it was his
best chance at the 21st-century version of the American Dream. Which is to say
that Jimmy was looking to get rich beyond his wildest imagination.
He’d grown up in a
925-square-foot house in an urban working-class neighborhood off 38th Street, right
next to Lafayette Square Mall. His dad, James Sr., was a field-service engineer
while his mom, Sue, worked at the church and cared for Jimmy and his younger
sister, Liz.
“Jimmy was such a jokester,” Liz
says. “He made friends with anybody and everybody.”
“Nobody was a stranger,” recalls
James Sr.
Jimmy was a good athlete and a
really great singer—he participated in every choir offered at Northwest High
School. But he never applied himself academically and drifted through a steady
flow of minimum-wage jobs after school. He got married in his early 20s, had a
daughter, and got divorced. It was around that time, the mid-’90s, that he was
caught breaking into a grocery store after hours and spent 180 days in the
Marion County Jail.
In the intervening decade, Jimmy
avoided any further legal trouble. But despite an honest effort—he built prefab
homes, did excavation work, and even tried his hand at real estate—his
financial situation never much improved. By the time the mid-2000s rolled
around, Jimmy was an unemployed felon with child-support payments, a new wife,
and a two-bedroom apartment he could barely furnish. That’s when he ran into an
old childhood friend, a guy everybody called “Bob.” Jimmy and Bob had dealt in
small amounts years before, but now Bob had a connection to semi-trucks full of
Mexican weed. Jimmy jumped at the opportunity to make some real green. And boy
did he have fun spending it.
It’s impossible to know how much
weed Jimmy sold or how much money he made during the four years he middle-manned
marijuana for the Mexican cartel. The government would later charge him with
moving 22,000 pounds, which at roughly $1,000 per pound equals just over $20
million. It’s a gaudy, outlandish number, and according to Jimmy and his family
it’s wildly, unbelievably exaggerated.
What about Jimmy’s situation
wasn’t hyperbolic? The man enjoyed the hell out of his new lifestyle.
He bought cool cars, flashy
jewelry, and floor-length furs. He filled his basement with enough sports
collectibles to stock a retail store. He attended big sporting events, made
trips to Vegas, and had been in the process of purchasing a vacation home in
Florida. But at the same time, Jimmy had practically zero wealth. When he was
arrested on the original state charge in Indiana, his seized assets totaled
just over half a million dollars, not including the 6,000-square-foot red-brick
behemoth his family had been living in (that house was still owned by Bob, who
had moved to the Dallas metroplex the year before).
“My son had a money problem,”
James Sr. says. “He didn’t know the value of it!”
Jimmy had always been bad with
money, although often in a good way. He was very generous. When he was broke,
for instance, he wouldn’t hesitate to put a dollar in a homeless man’s cup or
let a friend crash for free in a house he was trying to rent out. It was the
same way when he was flush, only it was hundred-dollar bills and
all-expenses-paid vacations. In retrospect, it seemed like he was trying to
karmically right his criminal wrongs, as if the flash of a thick roll could
bribe the universe into looking the other way.
Jimmy donated anonymously to
Riley Hospital for Children, dropped off toys and bikes to a local radio
station every Christmas, and lavished his mom with a $7,000 catered Mother’s
Day dinner. Once, after seeing the baseball fields he played on as a kid in
disrepair, weeds overgrowing the infield and broken fence posts in the
outfield, Jimmy found the director of the Little League and donated $5,000 to
help restore the old ball fields. He wanted the kids he saw out there playing
to have the same great memories of the place that he had.
But, of course, the universe
can’t be bribed. And by the time Jimmy found himself on a bus headed to Fannin
County Jail in dusty Bonham, Texas, he couldn’t even afford a lawyer.
“DOJ is basically like a football
team that goes out on the field with razorblades and bicycle chains.”
Why was the government
prosecuting Jimmy Romans in Texas, specifically East Texas, 800 miles from where
he sold marijuana? The short answer: Because they could.
Jay Combs, Assistant U.S.
Attorney for the Eastern District of Texas, looked out over the jury seated on
wooden pews inside the century-old courthouse in Sherman, a city with a
population of about 36,000—roughly the size of Plainfield—located near the
Oklahoma border.
“A partnership in crime, ladies
and gentlemen,” Combs told the jury. “That is what you’re going to hear about
over the course of the coming days.”
It had been 15 months since Jimmy,
along with 15 other co-conspirators from the Indianapolis area, were indicted
by the government for conspiracy to distribute marijuana. While Jimmy had been
putting his life back together following his state arrest, the Indiana State
Police had continued their investigation. They had an informant who put them on
to Bob, who was overseeing the operation from the Dallas area, and they’d
intercepted a white cargo van on I-465 that was filled with 2,000 pounds of
pot. The bust had attracted the attention of the DEA. It was dominoes from
there.
The long answer as to why Jimmy
was on trial in the Eastern District of Texas consists of two reasons. One is
technical, the other inherent.
The first reason comes from a
1912 Supreme Court case, Hyde v. United States. The Sixth Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution makes clear that a defendant accused of a crime has the right to
stand trial before an impartial jury from the state and district in which the
crime is alleged to have occurred. What the 101-year-old Hyde ruling did was
create a loophole, allowing any overt act committed in furtherance of a
criminal conspiracy to be tried in whatever district the act was committed.
It can be anything, really.
Something as simple as a single member of a conspiracy receiving a traffic
citation in a district is enough to implicate everyone in the entire
conspiracy. Which is exactly what happened in Jimmy’s case: A U-Haul being used
to move a member of the conspiracy down to Dallas to work as a money runner had
been pulled over along the I-30 corridor in Texarkana, just inside the border
of the Eastern District.
That was all that Jay Combs
needed to prosecute the case. And he wasn’t the only one—the route that the
U-Haul had taken from Indy to Dallas, which had been highlighted in an atlas
the government recovered, gave seven other districts a venue claim. The
Southern District of Indiana, at the time headed by current Indianapolis Mayor
Joe Hogsett, would have made the most sense. But they declined to take it.
That created a situation where
the federal agents who’d taken over the investigation from the Indiana State
Police were then able to offer the case to federal prosecutors in the “just
passing through” districts, a process known by critics as “venue shopping.”
The Eastern District of Texas was
buying.
The second, less technical reason
Jimmy was on trial in Texas had to do with the very nature of the federal
criminal justice system itself.
“You have to understand the
pathology of the process and the extent to which the criminal justice deck is
stacked in favor of the government,” explains Clark Neily, vice president of
criminal justice at the Cato Institute. “DOJ is basically like a football team
that goes out on the field with razorblades and bicycle chains.” Federal
prosecutors are given wide latitude and unchecked discretion during the early
stages of a criminal investigation, says Neily. Moreover, his argument goes,
they are incentivized to achieve speedy convictions. “Think of prosecutors as
deer hunters competing to get the nicest rack on their wall. That’s how they
get promoted within the organization.”
Which explains why, according to
a 2018 study by the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL),
fewer than 3 percent of federal criminal cases result in a trial, while more
than 97 percent are resolved by a plea agreement.
Of the 15 men from Indianapolis
originally indicted, four of them, including Jimmy, opted to exercise their
Sixth Amendment right.
It would become clear that the
government was not pleased.
Jimmy’s court-appointed lawyer,
James Whalen, had been practicing criminal law in Texas for nearly two decades.
He knew that his client’s best chance was to contest the venue.
The trouble was that convincing a
jury to acquit on what seemed like a technicality is a tough sell, particularly
on a drug charge in very conservative, very pro–law enforcement Sherman, Texas.
The trial lasted three days.
The cops testified about the stop
of the white cargo van, and how it had been spotted at Jimmy’s house on one
occasion, and they brought with them photo evidence of all the toys and
collectibles Jimmy had in his basement: 50 signed jerseys. Forty signed balls.
A pair of boxing gloves autographed by Muhammad Ali. There was a partial
picture of the 35 pairs of white Nike Air Force Ones in his closet, and Jimmy’s
prized sheared beaver coat made an appearance.
As damning as the testimony from
police was, it was the words from the other co-conspirators that sealed Jimmy’s
fate. Especially his old childhood friend Bob, the original and main target of
the federal investigation. (His forfeited assets included over $4.5 million in
cash and five houses.) Bob, who had an extensive criminal record and had been
caught lying under oath and coercing witnesses in a previous DWI case, had
debriefed with the government 10 times before trial.
“Why did you plead guilty?” Combs
asked at the beginning of his testimony.
“Because I felt like it was the
right thing to do and I wanted to take responsibility for my actions,” Bob
said. “I committed the crime.”
Over the course of two days, he
laid out the inner workings of the organization he admitted to being the leader
of. He told the jury how he’d stolen the Mexican connection from his previous
dealer and was the point person between the source of supply and the streets of
Indianapolis. Any money that was collected by Jimmy or other middlemen was sent
to Bob, who kept all the receipts on an Excel spreadsheet that he diligently
updated daily. He even told the jury about how it was Jimmy, a few years his
senior, who’d introduced him to marijuana and taught him how to bag up $20
sacks when he was still a senior in high school. It was all very, very damning.
But it was Jimmy’s ex-wife, who’d
been cooperating with investigators since the divorce, that really drove home
the dagger. She testified about how years before—when she’d been pregnant with
their second child—Jimmy had instructed her to move a heavy duffel bag that was
full of marijuana. She also brought with her a note Jimmy had handwritten
listing all the assets he once owned. Most importantly, and against all
evidence to the contrary, she claimed that Bob and Jimmy were 50/50 partners.
Jimmy’s lawyer tried his best to
remind the jury of the venue issue, at one point spending three minutes with
Jimmy’s ex-wife trying to find Fishers, Indiana, on a map. And just as he had
with every other witness the government presented, Whalen attempted to show
that she had something substantial to gain for her testimony. Specifically, he
pointed out that she was in the United States on a green card, and thus subject
to expulsion from the country if charged with a crime.
It was an argument that fell on
uncaring ears. The jury returned a guilty verdict first thing the next morning.
And just like that, Jimmy was plunged back beneath the rapids of the justice
system and propelled, frantic and gasping, toward the sound of crashing water.
The worst was yet to come.
Jimmy sat in stunned silence. He
understood what Judge Crone was saying but was still numb to its full meaning.
Looming high on the bench in her
black robes was the Honorable Marcia Crone. Judge Crone, deeply religious and
strongly conservative, had been appointed to the federal bench by George W.
Bush in 2003. As much power as federal prosecutors have in who gets charged
with what, it is judges with lifetime appointments who hold the ultimate power
in deciding the fate of a guilty defendant.
Judge Crone was considered a fair
arbiter during the guilt-and-innocence phase of the trial. But when it came to
sentencing, she wasn’t afraid to hit the top range of the recommended
guidelines.
The way federal sentences are
calculated is incredibly complex, yet the formula is something nearly every
guilty defendant can recite verbatim and in excruciating detail. The simplest
way to think of it is as a crime scorecard, in which a person’s criminal
history combines with the elements of their new offense to equal a guideline for
the judge to base their sentence upon.
Jimmy had a clean criminal
history (the burglary charge was too far in the past to count against him), but
prosecutors threw everything else they had at him. Bob claimed to have imported
over 50,000 pounds, of which Jimmy was held responsible for 22,000 pounds—just
enough to put him over the threshold to automatically trigger recommended
sentencing of 30 years to life. Since the government also was charging him with
operating a stash house and introducing an underage Bob to cannabis way back
when, Jimmy’s sentencing guidelines came back with a recommendation of life
imprisonment.
On behalf of the government, Jay
Combs argued that the sentence was appropriate. Jimmy was not your “average
player,” he said, citing all the evidence illustrating the luxurious lifestyle
he’d lived. “In fact, there is much to show that he was a kingpin of a massive
$40 million operation, and the sentencing guidelines reflect just that.”
Defense attorney James Whalen, on
Jimmy’s behalf, countered that the sentence was excessive, that based on the
facts of the case it would simply be for punishment’s sake alone. Whalen
mentioned that voters in two states, Colorado and Washington, had recently
approved the sale of marijuana for recreational use. He asked the court to
consider the growing trend. He also pointed to the 12-year sentence that the
leader of the conspiracy, Bob, had received. “I think to then sentence Mr.
Romans to life in prison results in a significant sentencing disparity,” he said.
“And it clearly, in my view, punishes Mr. Romans for exercising his right to a
jury trial.”
Whalen was referring to what’s
known as the “trial penalty,” the perceived discrepancy between what
prosecutors will offer during a plea deal and what the sentence becomes after a
trial. In fact, a 2018 study of sentencing data confirmed what the anecdotes
suggested: The average post-trial sentence for guilty defendants is triple that
of the average post-plea sentence, even when the crime is exactly the same.
“Your Honor, I have been doing
this for long enough that I’ve had clients receive life sentences. And the one
common denominator in all those cases is they murdered somebody.”
“Well,” Judge Crone responded,
“you can get life for not murdering people.”
“I know you can, Your Honor. But
to me this is not that case. And I think the fact they spent money does not
justify a life sentence. The guidelines are wrong. I think a variance is
appropriate.”
Judge Crone looked down upon the
40-year-old father of three sitting below her. Her mind was made up.
“Request for variance is denied,”
she declared. “I think a life sentence is appropriate in this instance. The
large quantity of drugs, the large quantity of funds, him getting other people
involved in this lifestyle of crime and drugs.” The judge was boiling herself
into a sermon, her righteousness spilling over the bench. “No matter what
states are doing, I don’t agree with it. The federal government hasn’t changed
the marijuana laws, and I think it’s misguided the states that have. So I don’t
agree with that. And I’m not going to look at the trends.”
Jimmy sat in stunned silence. He
understood what Judge Crone was saying but was still numb to its full meaning.
James Whalen was all too aware.
“I was shocked,” he admits now.
“A life sentence for marijuana—how in the world does that even comport to make
sense? Especially in the age of legalization. If you’re importing that much
heroin, okay, you have the potential to kill a lot of people. But marijuana?
Nobody’s dead here.”
After reading the sentence aloud,
Judge Crone briefly paused before adding insult to injury: “It is ordered that
the defendant shall pay the United States a special assessment of $100 which is
due and payable immediately.”
She’d given Jimmy a life sentence
and charged him $100 for the privilege.
The gavel came down.
FMC Lexington sits high atop a
hill overlooking the pastoral landscape of Eastern Kentucky. The imposing brick
prison, with its towering concrete facade and layers of barbed wire, looks like
something out of a Stephen King novel. It is Jimmy Romans’s home.
On a sunny Sunday morning this
past January, not long before COVID-19 spread like wildfire through the prison,
Jimmy Romans appeared in the visitor’s room looking heavier than when he’d gone
in, with white whiskers speckled into his red stubble. He greeted a stranger
like they were old friends.
“You ever been to federal prison
before?” he asked, spreading his arms out wide to showcase the cramped visiting
room. “Welcome!”
Jimmy had appealed Judge Crone’s
decision but received no relief. He bounced around from one federal facility to
the next over the following half-decade, holding the weight of his walking
death sentence at bay while compiling certificates of self-improvement and a
clean disciplinary record.
He received a break in 2017
thanks to legislation known as “Drugs Minus Two.” The amendment retroactively
reduced the sentencing guidelines for drug trafficking offenses. Life without
parole became 360 months, or 30 years. He is eligible for release in January of
2037.
For the Indiana State Police,
their effort paid off. In addition to the half-million in assets they seized
from Jimmy, they enjoyed a hefty slice of the federal forfeiture as well.
Down in Texas, Assistant U.S.
Attorney Jay Combs was nominated for a national award for his work “prosecuting
and investigating a significant drug trafficking organization.” Meanwhile, the
courthouse in Sherman has since become a venue for trying Colombian drug cases.
Jimmy’s childhood friend Bob
served five years and is now a free man.
Judge Marcia Crone is 68 and
still sitting on the bench.
As for the trends, Jimmy’s lawyer
asked her to consider: Medical marijuana is now available in over half the
country, and voters in nine additional states have legalized recreational use
since Jimmy was sentenced back in 2013. According to a recent Gallup poll, 66
percent of the country supports an end to federal prohibition.
The federal prison system is the
nation’s largest jailer. It costs the government nearly $35,000 a year to house
a single inmate. Almost half of its inhabitants are imprisoned on a drug
trafficking conviction. For both humanitarian and budgetary reasons, there has
been a strong bipartisan push to release nonviolent drug offenders from federal
prison. The Trump administration even put together an informal task force, led
by the president’s son-in-law and White House adviser Jared Kushner, to weigh
in on clemency petitions. A nonprofit out of California has taken up Jimmy’s
cause, and his paperwork has been submitted to the administration and is
currently under review.
Back in the visitor’s room of his
current home, Jimmy reflects on the choices that brought him there.
“I got too big for my britches,”
he says. “I was greedy, man. But people make mistakes and life goes on, you
know? My mistakes are going to last a lifetime.”
Jimmy has done the math. His two
youngest kids, who he hasn’t seen since Father’s Day 2011, will be pushing 30
if he makes it to the end of his sentence. His two grandkids—he’s Papaw Jimmy
now—will have graduated from high school. He may never see his parents as a free
man again. Jimmy admits that he deserved to be in jail, but argues that he’s
done his time: just 5 percent of marijuana offenders in the federal system are
serving sentences longer than 20 years. All he’s asking, he says, is for a shot
at the second half of his life, a chance to repair his broken relationships and
prove to people that the man he used to be is not the man he’s become.
“President Trump can order my
release with the swipe of a pen,” Jimmy says. “It’s in his hands right now.”
It is enough to keep hope alive.
Excellent story, thanks for posting!
ReplyDeletePity the poor drug dealers! Jimmy was illegally selling drugs that destroy the fabric of Indiana's communities and families. He was burning through cash, which accounts for why he had nothing left. His 6,000 foot house belonged to his best friend, Bob, who was down in Dallas, Texas organizing crime for the Drug Cartels. Frankly he deserved the maximum sentencing he got.
ReplyDeleteFuck you! A life sentence for weed?
DeleteGreat story! Thanks for posting!
DeleteSusan please keep living where you're most comfortable as I know you will not be anywhere near me Gracias a Díos
DeleteFor weed? Are you kidding me?
Delete10:46, I agree.
DeleteOnly wanna be drug dealers, and pot smoking tweekers are going to get offended like 1:29.
I get it...your name is Susan after all.
Delete“ selling drugs that destroy the fabric of Indiana's communities and families.”.
DeleteHahaha what the fuck, he was selling weed, not heroin. We all know your real name is Karen.
Phelpso
8:25 even if her name was Roseanna, Susana is right,
DeleteJimmy is in trouble, y eso se saca por andar ahi de caliente.
And then he did not plead...
--Trials are very expensive, and if you do not have a rich influential sponsor Godfather, like JOSEPH WEISCHELBAUM or John DeLorean on the US, forgetaboutit...kiss your ass goodbye.
Checkout this article from Vice News about the DEA
ReplyDeletehttps://www.vice.com/en_us/article/dyzkvq/the-defund-the-police-movement-is-coming-for-the-drug-enforcement-administration
David Ronald Chandler, federal inmate # 17867-001 another POW of the war on drugs. A small time pot grower/dealer from rural piedmont, alabama usa, who the gov't made into the first federal drug kingpin. Doing life, never to be free again. The war on drugs did more harm than the drugs themselves did.
ReplyDeletedang chivis, what a great story, great read
ReplyDeleteI know, right? My buddy Gus found it....kudos to him
ReplyDeleteThey should defund the DEA.They’ve ruined more lives then saved.But of course upperclass Whites are gonna think they are heroes.
ReplyDeleteit isn't the DEA who decides how to prosecute and what sentence to ask for. or what sweet deals to ask for.
DeleteThere are so many things that I would like to say. But the main thing that I want to say, is that this is how the system works. Interestingly, he got the same sentence as Chapo Guzman. So who does being a Kingpin favor?
DeleteBy comparison, I'm going to mention some names here. Marco Antonio Paredes Machado, only got 22 years. Marco Antonio Paredes Machado probably ran the largest marijuana distribution Network in the Southwest. Hundreds of tons of marijuana. So who does the federal guidelines favor? It obviously favors the drug kingpin, not the lower-level guy like Jimmy.
I was prosecuted by the federal government for marijuana trafficking in a ring that was larger than the one that Jimmy was busted in. At the time, it was one of the largest drug busts ever along the Southwest border. They don't have any trouble handing out long prison sentences, but Chivis is correct, the DEA recommends what you get, and depending on your level of cooperation, you can end up with one sweet deal. If you do not cooperate, the hammer the life out of you.
Good article...
El CONEJO LOCO
“Whites”? Asshole.
DeleteBesides that DEA confiscated more $ and assets that it uses! It will never be defunded!
DeleteWhites? Fucking racist
DeleteWhitey has no right to claim racism, because:
DeleteNobody has ever enslaved their white race the way "SOME" whites have enslaved other races, after kidnapping and selling them in the public square, then denying them any human rights, the right to vote, to have a family, to education, to dignity, to economic progress and opportunity, and back again to denying them the right to vote these days...
7:35 inflating prices at will, the DEA always makes a profit on paper, but as soon as you are not in Kansas anymore, the fog disappears and the true costs add up to a lot of bullshit, prisons are the most expensive bread and water resorts, paid for by the US Taxpayer, then the business corporate Welfare Queens go around privatizing prisons, schools, hospitals, with government money, to shake off more money
DeleteSome say of you want to have a friend in Washington DC, to get a dog, at least he won't be testifying against you or your motives and you will never need to pardon him for anything, unless he becomes a turkey on Thanksgiving...
ReplyDelete--Let's say what has Jimmy ever done for the pres that deserves the burn and the roast?
Maybe the Indiana Klansmen that trained Timothy McVeigh could push for his clemency, they have some bikers to help there.
Re: 12:42 Chivis, an opinion?
DeletePerson with pillow of weed would've done less then 5 years for their choice to move the weed but decided to rat and put over a dozen people in jail.
ReplyDeleteFor marijuana only, he deserves release, many who deal in pot heroin, meth and coke get much, much less. Heavy cartel players do and we read about this in BB.
ReplyDeleteThis "conservative values and morals" judge does not do herself or her cause justice, she should go after the meth and heroin flowing through her district.
Can we get this bob guy full name...asking for a friend
ReplyDeleteEast Texas doesn't play got caught with a load back in 2003 going through sulphur springs luckily feds didn't pick it up 30,000$ later got 15 yrs probation plus had to pay for load lost. Life for weed? Come on now is that judge a cave woman? Give him 5 yrs in Barry Telford g3 or above and he'll be cured saving taxpayers $
ReplyDeleteDickie Lynn released after 31 years for smuggling 29,000 lbs Colombian coke by airplane into Mobile. Keys news drug smuggler Dickie Lynn coming home...
ReplyDeleteGC
I never heard of dude- just looked him up and, GOD DAMN! Amazing that he even got out- and interesting he had so many cops and feds speaking on his behalf- wtf is up with that?? Theres a whole bunch of other people with life sentences (or close to it) that deserve to be released before this dickwad.. 29,000 pounds of COCAINE!! something smells fiahy
Delete1:49 police brotherhood pensión funds are drowning in bad debts and investments, therefore they have to look away and allow for a lotta BS to pass to recoup their loses
DeleteVenue can be a bitch when you are dealing with a criminal conspiracy case. USAO picked the most conservative, rural district they could find in order to be able to sell the story that a couple of guys running trucks full of weed are a danger to society. The other reason that 97% of criminal cases are settled is that defendants would have to wait for years until trial started if every criminal case was tried.
ReplyDelete6:30 before you run truck loads of grifa around, get some AG or FBI director to guide the BIZ, there are many Pygmalions willing to help.
DeleteSome friends of mine in Wa state about 25 yrs ago had a little pot growing ring. They had about 10 houses they rented. Up here we have lots of heavily wooded areas on acreage,perfect for the indoor growing year round. They were making about 150k each quarter apiece. 4 guys. Back then a lb of good weed went for 4gs. We all made tons of cash. When the heat came, they all got busted on federal conspiracy to cultivate/manufacturing controlled substances, and tax evasion. All because one dummy put 30k down on a used Lambo. They all got 7 yrs. Out in 5 or a lil one way or other. This Jimmy guy got the shaft. I remember a guy in the 90's in Oklahoma I believe got a 25 to life for owning a shop that sold grow lights to a guy who got busted growing. Ludicrous.
ReplyDeleteYettt there's these fucking perverts only doing 10-20 years with a chance at parole..smh its fucking weed who dies from weed? Sure send him to jail but a fucking life sentence? Another thing fck that life time appointment shit for the judges.. fckin old outdated fucks
ReplyDelete@8:40 you are correct. Murders,rapist, and child molesters get out of jail early and 99% of the time go on to do it again destroying another innocent child or family. Drug using convictions should be treated with rehab and prison cells kept full of violent criminals
DeleteThis shit needs to be reversed- life for pedos- a friend of mine just got out of the feds- he said for a while there, even the feds were trying to alter the pedos paperwork because so many were getting smashed in there. He told me how he witnessed at least 5 that had been either whacked, or beat so bad to where the couldnt function anymore- vegetables- so at least some of them get what they deserve
Deletehere here He did his time let him go
ReplyDeleteGive Meth dealers life
9:49 do you mean the Shackler family and Purdue Pharmaceuticals?
DeleteAnd the legislators that made their shit legal until the market got established?
Or only their designated black market suppliers and pushers?
1:22 elect liberals if you want some justice, put punishment for corporate white collar criminals and their dirty asses on the liberal agenda and VOTE, and Vote as often as posible, vote chicago style, where even the dead used vote all the time,...
DeleteCan’t do the time don’t do the crime
ReplyDelete