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dipsydoodle

(42,239 posts)
Sat Nov 16, 2013, 06:45 PM Nov 2013

Thousands of Prisoners Sentenced to Die Behind Bars for Nonviolent Crimes




This past August, the Lafayette-based IND Monthly published a story about a 54-year-old man named Bill Winters, incarcerated at a medium-security prison in Epps, Louisiana. Winters, who is black, was arrested in June 2009, after he drunkenly entered an unlocked oncologist’s office on a Sunday morning, setting off a security alarm. When police arrived, he had rummaged through a desk drawer, and was in possession of a box of Gobstoppers candy. Winters was convicted of simple burglary a week before Thanksgiving, and given a seven-year prison sentence—hardly a slap on the wrist. But a few days later, the prosecutor in his case, Assistant District Attorney Alan Haney, sought additional punishment for Winters, under the state’s habitual offender law. Based on his record of nonviolent offenses, which went back to 1991 and ranged from cocaine possession to burglary, the trial court resentenced Winters to twelve years without any chance of parole. But Haney was still not satisfied. He appealed the ruling, arguing that the court had imposed an “illegally lenient sentence” and that the rightful punishment was life without the possibility of parole.

At a subsequent hearing, Lafayette Police Chief Jim Craft estimated that Winters had been arrested more than twenty times, calling him a “career criminal who victimized a lot of citizens in our city.” But it seemed clear that he was more of a thorn in the side of law enforcement than a looming threat to society. His brothers, Dennis and James, testified that Winters had been homeless at the time of his offense and that he had a history of addiction; James had overcome his own drug problems and said that he would be willing to “take [Winters] in and work with him.” A former Lafayette police officer who had once worked at a correctional facility where Winters was held, said that although he did not know him well, Winters “didn’t cause problems” and had potential for rehabilitation. But this past summer, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals issued its decision: “The state asserts that because of the defendant’s particular multiple offender status, the law mandates a minimum sentence of life in prison without benefit of parole, probation, or suspension of sentence. We agree.”

Dennis Winters was incredulous when he heard the news about his brother. “What? This makes no sense,” he told IND Monthly. “I don’t understand what these people are trying to do. He’s not a violent person. He’s fragile. He wouldn’t hurt anybody, except maybe for himself. I just don’t get how they’re going to give him life for some Gobstopper candy.”

Today, Winters joins hundreds of Louisiana prisoners sent to die in prison after committing similarly nonviolent offenses, from drug possession to property crimes. The national numbers are tallied in a major new study released today by the American Civil Liberties Union, titled “ A Living Death: Life without Parole For Nonviolent Offenses,” which documents scores of cases with echoes of Winters’s story. Across the country, defendants have been given life without parole for such crimes as having a crack pipe, “siphoning gasoline from a truck” and, in another Louisiana case, shoplifting a $159 jacket.

http://www.alternet.org/life-prison-stealing-candy-thousands-prisoners-sentenced-die-behind-bars-nonviolent-crimes
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Thousands of Prisoners Sentenced to Die Behind Bars for Nonviolent Crimes (Original Post) dipsydoodle Nov 2013 OP
meanwhile the feds ignore the wall street mob that raped the nation in 2008. some justice eh? nt msongs Nov 2013 #1
Prosecuting them is probably a waste of time davidn3600 Nov 2013 #3
Why did I suspect this was about the USA? ConcernedCanuk Nov 2013 #2
 

davidn3600

(6,342 posts)
3. Prosecuting them is probably a waste of time
Sun Nov 17, 2013, 03:44 AM
Nov 2013

They'll just buy the best lawyers and still get off.

The system is rigged up and down against people who don't have money.

 

ConcernedCanuk

(13,509 posts)
2. Why did I suspect this was about the USA?
Sun Nov 17, 2013, 03:09 AM
Nov 2013

.
.
.

Sad that we think the USA treats its own citizens so badly.

Sadder than that;

It's true.

CC

ps: I have personally seen how the USA treats its Veterans fer chrissakes - case closed.

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