For a Guy Who Plays a Tough-as-Nails-Legal Guy on Law & Order, Fred Thompson is Pretty Soft on Drug Kingpins-Campaign Advisers with Private Jets
The latest news from the mummified Fred Thompson campaign: It turns out his pal and supporter, Alabama developer Philip J. Martin was busted for selling 11 pounds of weed back in 1979.
Martin has a jet that Thompson uses to, well, jet around in while on the campaign trail. Fred is ready to stand by his man, assuming it doesn't cost him much:
"I know Phil is a good man," Thompson said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press." "He is my friend. He is going to remain my friend."
In 1979, Martin pleaded guilty to the sale of 11 pounds of marijuana, the Washington Post reported Sunday. In 1983, the newspaper said, he pleaded no contest to charges of cocaine trafficking and conspiracy stemming from a plan to sell $30,000 worth of the drug….
"I'm not going to throw my friend under the bus for something he did, you know, 25 years ago if he's OK now," Thompson said. "On the other hand, I'm running for president. I've got, you know, to do the right thing, you know, and problems occur, and I'll just have to figure it out."
Now that's leadership for you!
Needless to say, I think selling pot should be legal. And I don't doubt that Martin has paid his debt to society (whatever that means, especially if your crime was selling pot); certainly it sounds like he pays a lot in taxes, which as we all know are the price we pay for civilization yadda yadda yadda. But I really just can't stand the sanctimony regarding past pot behavior and the way it wafts back into consicousness in a political context without ever changing things very much.
Perhaps the hypocrisy of politicians regarding the pot issue (among many others, drug- and not drug-related) will eventually prove overwhelming to voters. I don't know. But here's a snippet from a 1999 Rolling Stone article detailing some sweetheart deals that politically connected dopers have scored. I'm glad that Martin and I guess these others didn't go to jail for something that shouldn't be a crime in the first place. But that only makes it even worse for all the folks stuck in jail for the same goddamn thing.
The offspring of important government officials, however, tend to avoid severe punishments for their marijuana crimes. In 1982, the year that President Reagan launched the war on marijuana, his chief of staff's son was arrested for selling marijuana. John C. Baker, the son of future Secretary of State James Baker III, sold a small amount of pot - around a quarter of an ounce - to an undercover cop at the family's ranch in Texas. Under state law, John Baker faced a possible felony charge and a prison term of between two and twenty years. Instead, he was charged with a misdemeanor, pleaded guilty and was fined $2,000. In 1980, Republican Rep. Dan Burton of Indiana introduced legislation that would require the death penalty for drug dealers. "We must educate our children about the dangers of drugs," Burton said, "and impose tough new penalties on dealers." Four years later his son was arrested while transporting nearly eight pounds of marijuana from Texas to Indiana. Burton hired an attorney for his son. While awaiting trial in that case, Danny Burton III was arrested again, only five months later, for his growing thirty marijuana plants in is Indianapolis apartment. Police also found a shotgun in the apartment. Under federal law, Danny Burton faced a possible mandatory minimum sentence of five years in prison just for the gun, plus up to three years in prison under state law for all the pot. Federal charges were never filed against Burton, who wound up receiving a milder sanction: a term of community service, probation and house arrest. When the son of Richard W. Riley ( the former South Carolina governor who became Clinton's secretary of education ) was indicted in 1992 on federal charges of conspiring to sell cocaine and marijuana, he faced ten years to life in prison and a fine Of $4 million. Instead, Richard Riley Jr. received six months of house arrest.
In September 1996, Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, R-Calif., attacked President Clinton for being "cavalier" toward illegal drugs and for appointing too many "soft on crime" liberal judges. "We must get tough on drug dealers," he declared. "Those who peddle destruction on our children must pay dearly." Four months later, his son Todd Cunningham was arrested by the Drug Enforcement Administration after helping to transport 400 pounds of marijuana from California to Massachusetts. Although Todd Cunningham confessed to having been part of a smuggling ring that had shipped at much as ten tons of pot throughout the U.S. - a crime that can lead to a life sentence without parole - he was charged only with distributing 400 pounds of pot. The prosecutor in his case recommended a sentence of fourteen months at a boot camp and a halfway house. Representative Cunningham begged the judge for leniency. "My son has a good heart," he said, fighting back tears. "Hes never been in trouble before."
Todd Cunningham was sentenced to two and a half years in prison. He might have received an even shorter sentence had he not tested positive for cocaine three times while out on bail. "The sentence Todd got had nothing to do with who Duke is," says the congressman's Press secretary. "Duke has always been tough on drugs and remains tough on drugs."
And if you haven't caught Drew Carey defending medical marijuana--fully legal in many states--yet, go to reason.tv now or click below:
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Martin has a jet that Thompson uses to, well, jet around in
Cue the "sky high" jokes.
"The sentence Todd got had nothing to do with who Duke is," says the congressman's Press secretary. "Duke has always been tough on drugs and remains tough on drugs."
coughcoughBULLSHITcoughcough
man it takes fucking balls of titanium coated in joan rivers to say shit like that in public.
We all thought the campaign adviser was a hero, but the science shows otherwise.
Seriously, I thought that Fred Thompson was going to be it. Guliani, McCain and Romney are so clearly disqualified from a republican point of view.
Is is really going to be RP
Or is it going to be the guy who believes that the world is 6000 years old, and that the Canadian govt is in a national igloo? I mean he really does seem like the best of the non RPs
(disclaimer, I don't know how old the earth is nor do I care about what Canadians have or don't have)(the Pyramids are 5 and change so it probably is more than 6)
If Thompson is really flying around in a jet that may have been used at one time to smuggle drugs over the border, I might have to give him a second look...
Politicians and the War on drugs sanity.
Laws for thine, but not for mine.
Keep Dope Alive !!!
Yeah the usual. Politicians are morons and worse when it comes to drugs. What does that make those who believe and support politicians who are "tough (ie very stupid and hypocritical" on drugs?
tatix,
Maybe the science shows him to be a viable alternate candidate?
Hey Reason guys,
don't you have a "click here for more" button? So we don't have to scroll forever to see the Ron Paul bit?
Who ho, RP just broke $4.7...
They either used a pound of Vaseline every time they filmed Thompson when he was on L&O or he has undergone rapid Gollumization in the last year and half. Dude looks tired.
They either used a pound of Vaseline every time they filmed Thompson when he was on L&O or he has undergone rapid Gollumization in the last year and half. Dude looks tired.
Getting cancer will age a man.
Getting cancer will age a man.
Not Chuck Norris. He'll karate-chemo that shit!
Well, Chuck Norris' tears also cure cancer. Too bad Chuck Norris has never cried.
can you get a better pic for that drew carey video than drew caressing his own breasts?