Federal Charge Against Native American Teen Over a Gram of Marijuana To Be Dropped
Following outcry over seemingly arbitrary nature of the charge, federal prosecutor comes to his senses.


Devontre Thomas, the 19-year-old Native American allegedly busted with a gram of marijuana on the grounds of his federally-administered Indian school in Oregon, will no longer face a year in prison per an agreement filed yesterday by the U.S. Attorney for Oregon's office.
The federal misdemeanor charge — which also potentially included a $1,000 fine and the loss of privileges such as federal student loans and housing assistance — will go away if Thomas maintains employment and a clean criminal record for the next 60 days, according to Willamette Week.
The change of heart by the federal prosecutor came after Thomas' story created a national outcry over the seemingly arbitrary nature of the charge, which was filed in a state where recreational marijuana use is legal for adults over the age of 21. But because Thomas' school is on an Indian reservation, the federal government has jurisdiction.
Three Oregon Democrats (Sen. Ron Wyden, Sen. Jeff Merkley, and Rep. Earl Blumenauer) sent a letter yesterday to U.S. Attorney for Oregon Billy Williams asking for "a full list of all marijuana possession crimes pursued by your office since 2014." The letter also read in part:
We recognize that marijuana remains a Schedule I Substance under the Controlled Substances Act, but your office retains prosecutorial discretion in expending scarce legal resources in pursuit of those priorities that will make the biggest difference to Oregonians. President Obama has stated that "we have bigger fish to fry" than prosecuting state legal marijuana cases. We agree with this approach.
There are opportunity costs in choosing to prosecute low level marijuana crimes rather than targeting criminal activity linked to violence. In particular, we have concerns with any approach that fails to take into account the devastating effects that marijuana possession convictions have on future employment and education prospects for those who are convicted, especially for a substance that has been decriminalized in Oregon since 1973. Fighting dangerous drug crimes and reducing the prevalence of these drugs and their effects should be the priority of your office.
Thomas took a great risk by not immediately copping a plea deal and opting for a jury trial, but now he will be free of the stigma of a federal drug conviction and can move on with his life. However, as long as marijuana remains classified as a Schedule I drug, this kind of situation can happen, and not every poor young person in every corner of this country will be afforded the media attention Thomas' case received, nor sympathetic politicians willing to take up his cause.
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Nice roll. That one's gonna smoke like a grease fire mon!
Good thing he wasn't caught with a six-pack of beer.
...or a can of Scotch whisky.
"*Belch,* I popped the top of my Scotch, now where's my remote, I wanna watch monster trucks!"
"Oh, great, I have a can of Scotch in one hand, my remote in the other, but now my balls itch."
Luckier than this guy:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rTMnz_OG9rk
What is wrong with monster trucks?
Ooh, that Florida-phobic remark of mine will haunt me, won't it?
Made to pour them out on the side of the road while the cop leans on his cruiser and drinks the bottle he pinched?
#USAttornysLivesMatter
Even for a blog where the lazy cliche is the official Pokemon of the comments section, that was a particularly egregious waste of pixels. If you lower the bar any further you're likely to strike groundwater.
Delete your account.
Bully!
This is why 91% of libertarians reject the libertarian label!
(laughing)
Wait are you talking to me or AM? Because either way it's probably a good idea.
I was piggybacking on your comment by posting a lazy cliche, but then you had to go post this comment, which diminishes the mildly entertaining aspect of my comment, so please delete your account.
My thoughts and prayers are with you both.
If it weren't for low expectations, one wouldn't be able to expect anything from AddictionMyth a'tall.
Hit a nerve, eh?
More like just got on one, but surely you're not THAT self-unaware.
Don't underestimate him, bruh. AM possesses depths of unawareness that even he doesn't know he has.
Or so it would seem....
Hey - I like your spunk. Can I train you in my gym?
No.
"The federal misdemeanor charge ? which also potentially included a $1,000 fine and the loss of privileges such as federal student loans and housing assistance ? will go away if Thomas maintains employment and a clean criminal record for the next 60 days,"
So instead of a pound of flesh, they'll settle for 15oz.? How kind of them...
will go away if Thomas maintains employment and a clean criminal record for the next 60 days,
For an Indian who presumably is living on a rez that's actually quite difficult.
So they're betting they WILL get that pound of flesh...
Classic fed tactic, innit? Drop the issue for now, wait fifteen minutes for the media fervor to recede, then wallop the poor bastard.
Following outcry over seemingly arbitrary nature of the charge, federal prosecutor comes to his senses.
Gee, ain't we lucky.
/sarc
Prosecutors should be applauded when they choose not to press charges.
The problem is obviously too many goddam federal agents. Their organizations have become bloated and are seeking meritless charges and trying to create new crimes and criminals including framing retarded kids. They are attacking each other and even cannibalizing themselves. It's funny but before you get angry at me for laughing at you, I also think it's quite pathetic too.
So if it went to trial would he be able to call in the last 3 presidents as expert witnesses.
And for once, we'd believe them if they said they didn't remember.
I would like to know what the prosecutor has to say in reply to the letter.
Rule of law! Crucify him!
Libertarian moment?
I'll take whatever I can get, at this point.
A national outcry and intervention by 2 Senators and a Congressman results in a more lenient plea arrangement, although the arrest record won't go away. The system works. Justice was done.