Montana Medical Marijuana Grower Faces 80-Year Prison Sentence
On Tuesday I noted a Washington Post editorial that described the Obama administration's policy regarding medical marijuana as mainly "hands off," with the Justice Department "focusing scarce resources on major violators." Similarly, the Associated Press reported a few weeks ago that "the Obama administration has largely turned a blind eye" to medical marijuana in states where it is legal. Here is what that hands-off, blind-eye policy looks like in Montana: Chris Williams, a partner in Montana Cannabis, faces a prison sentence of 80 to 92 years for supplying patients with marijuana—and for insisting on his right to a trial.
Williams' business was one of several Montana dispensaries raided by the Drug Enforcement Administration last year. He is the only defendant arrested as a result of those raids who has refused to plead guilty. One of his partners, Tom Daubert, received probation; another, Chris Lindsey, reached a similar deal but has not been sentenced yet; and a third, Richard Flor, died while serving a five-year prison sentence.
What explains this astonishing range of penalties, from zero prison time to nearly a century? Mandatory minimums. Specifically, prosecutors charged Williams, after he turned down a series of plea deals, with four counts of using firearms in furtherance of a drug crime, based on pistols and shotguns kept at the Helena grow operation where he worked. Federal law prescribes a five-year mandatory minimum penalty for the first such offense and 25 years for each subsequent offense. Furthermore, the sentences must be served consecutively. Hence Williams, who was convicted of all four gun charges, will get at least 80 years when he is sentenced in January, even though he was not charged with wielding the guns, let alone hurting anyone with them. In fact, having the guns around would have been perfectly legal had he not been growing marijuana. (This is the same provision under which Weldon Angelos, a 24-year-old record producer, received a 55-year sentence for a few small-time pot sales in 2004.) The Missoulian reports that Williams could get an additional 12 years for the four marijuana counts on which he was convicted, but whatever the precise number it is effectively a life sentence.
The mandatory penalty is so absurdly, unfathomably harsh, in fact, that after Williams' trial U.S. Attorney Mike Cotter took the extraordinary step of offering to drop one count of manufacturing marijuana, two counts of possession with intent to distribute, and the three firearm counts associated with them, which would have made it possible for Williams to serve "only" 10 years. All Williams had to do was refrain from appealing his convictions. He refused, insisting that he did nothing wrong and that the feds had no business interfering with a medical marijuana system blessed by the state of Montana.
During his trial Williams was not allowed to mention Montana's medical marijuana law, since it is not deemed relevant to his guilt under the federal Controlled Substances Act, which recognizes no legitimate use for cannabis. In addition to his criminal appeal, Williams is pursuing a civil suit arguing that the federal crackdown on medical marijuana violates the 10th Amendment by usurpring powers "reserved to the States." I think he is right, but I don't see how he can prevail in light of Gonzales v. Raich, the 2005 case in which the Supreme Court held that the power to regulate interstate commerce authorizes federal action against people who grow and possess marijuana for medical use in compliance with state law. Robert Raich, who helped argue that case on behalf of his wife, Angel Raich, tells A.P., ""The War on Drugs is too sacrosanct a sacred cow for the courts to weigh in [Williams'] favor."
[via the Drug War Chronicle]
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
Don't do the crime of you can't do the time. And keep your eye on the sparrow.
OT:Crazy as it sounds but this Deputy Sheriff did his job and protected Constitutional rights, can you believe it?
He should start packing his bags for Gitmo right now, he will shortly be arrested by the feds on terrorism charges.
Weird day.
He should be sent to Gitmo as well. Did he have a permit to give out boots? How would he know that those boots are the proper fit for the homeless guy without a huge bureaucracy to oversee the giving? Obviously this officer is way out of line and likely a terrorist.
Shocking (no sarc).
This is what will happen in WA and CO.
Anyone want to take bets on how long it is before Dunphy shows up to refute that statement?
Until I have been given a good reason to believe that the feds will change what they do with state-legal pot growers/distributors, I will assume that this is what they will continue to do.
He's probably drooling on himself after chasing a handful of pills with his favorite liquor.
I asked him once, if as a Libertarian, he supports the legalization of 'all' drugs. I don't think he answered me. I could be wrong, but I don't remember getting a reply.
Nah, he tends to run when he has painted himself into a corner so thoroughly that not even Joe levels of Derpsplaining could get him out of it.
I asked him once, if as a Libertarian, he supports the legalization of 'all' drugs.
Just do not get him started on DUIs.
I've already witnessed the results of that.
correct
Well, how else are we to protect the children from the evil high priests of this demonic weed? You can't let that kind of evil just walk the streets. Pretty soon when you see the hordes of reefer crazed zombies taking over the streets of Denver and Seattle and feeding on the flesh of school children, don't say that me and the New York Times didn't warn you already.
Now where did I read some thing about Cruel and unusual Punishment
May POTUS suffer a long and agonizing death.
law. noun. the principles and regulations established in a community by some authority and applicable to its people, whether in the form of legislation or of custom and policies recognized and enforced by judicial decision.
Where does prosecutorial discretion fit into this definition?
Did you miss the part about "authoritay"?
This guy is being punished for having the audacity to want due process. The prosecutor should be flayed alive and burned at the stake.
I'd love to see a local sheriff or PD stand guard against the DEA or any other federal agency that is trying to arrest people for doing something legal within the state. And if the federal agents trespass against the orders of the property owners and the local cops, then they immediately arrest those agents and charge them with trespassing. Sure, the feds will claim supremacy, but I'd love to see the local and state governments start arresting federal agents for abusing the local citizens.
I think local police would gain a lot of respect from me and many others for standing up for the rights of their citizens against the tyranny of the federal government.
Imagine the blood bath that would ensue in any conflict between a DEA K9 Unit and a local K9 unit.
very super blogos thanks admin sohbet & sohbet odalar?
earned that one "Sharon Levy" cares more for boot licking than the Hip sohbet odalar? & cinsel sohbet