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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhitaker is sicker than Jeff Sessions. As US attorney sought longer-than-usual drug sentences
Raeanna Woodys crimes hardly seemed like they would add up to a life sentence in prison. She had two nonviolent drug convictions, for possessing marijuana and delivering 12 grams of methamphetamine. But when she was arrested in a third drug case, she said, the office of U.S. Attorney Matthew G. Whitaker decided to make an example of her.
Under Whitaker, who is now acting attorney general, Woody was given a choice: spend the rest of her life in jail, or accept a plea bargain sentence of 21 to 27 years, according to court records. She took the deal.
Federal Judge Robert W. Pratt in the Southern District of Iowa later accused prosecutors of having misused their authority in her nonviolent case. He urged President Barack Obama to commute her sentence and Obama did shorten her term , after she had served 11 years.
Woodys case highlights one of the most controversial if little-known aspects of Whitakers career: his efforts to obtain unusually stiff sentences for people accused of drug crimes.
Whitaker spent nearly five years as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Iowa. His office was more likely than all but one other district in the United States to use its authority to impose the harshest sentences on drug offenders, according to a finding by a different Iowa federal judge, Mark W. Bennett, who it called a deeply troubling disparity.
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Trump last week announced his support for legislation that would give judges more discretion in sentencing nonviolent drug offenders and reducing prison terms. Sessions had opposed the bill. Now Whitaker, as acting head of the Justice Department, is in a powerful position to try to influence the outcome.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/as-us-attorney-whitaker-imposed-longer-than-usual-drug-sentences/2018/11/21/a66dfaf2-e9de-11e8-bbdb-72fdbf9d4fed_story.html?utm_term=.6b8fa12ef8f3
The rate at which Whitakers office and another one in Iowa sought the harshest possible sentence was a jaw-dropping and deeply troubling disparity compared to the vast majority of federal courts in the nation, Bennett said in a statement to The Washington Post. Whitaker never appeared before him, and he declined to comment about Whitakers term as U.S. attorney.
Whitakers Southern District of Iowa used enhanced sentences in 84 percent of relevant cases, compared with 26 percent nationwide, Bennetts finding said. Bennett concluded that a defendant in the Northern District of Iowa which had a rate of filings similar to Whitakers district was 2,532 percent more likely to be subjected to an enhanced sentence compared with someone convicted of a similar offense in a Nebraska district.
Bfd
(1,406 posts)Sessions wanted to build more prisons.
Whitaker wants longer prison sentences.
Somewhere there's a $$ profit trail back to both of them.
yonder
(9,674 posts)I just started watching and am almost through the first season on Netflix.
Blustery, opinionated, authoritarian, my way or the highway, Hank.
mr_lebowski
(33,643 posts)yonder
(9,674 posts)I'm onto it now.
shanti
(21,675 posts)better call saul after you finish breaking bad.