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News (Media Awareness Project) - US UT: Appeal Of Pot Dealer's 55-Year Prison Term To Be Heard
Title:US UT: Appeal Of Pot Dealer's 55-Year Prison Term To Be Heard
Published On:2005-11-14
Source:Salt Lake Tribune (UT)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 08:38:00
US UT: APPEAL OF POT DEALER'S 55-YEAR PRISON TERM TO BE HEARD TUESDAY

Weldon Angelos' supporters say he is a casualty in the war on drugs,
an offender who deserves time behind bars but not a virtual life
sentence for carrying a firearm while dealing pot in Utah.

Prosecutors, though, insist the former music producer's mandatory
55-year term is appropriate. They paint Angelos as major dealer who
hooked up with a violent street gang, carried a gun while conducting
his illicit business and made his living peddling large quantities of drugs.

"Addressing the epidemic social problem of armed drug distribution
with increased punishment and deterrence is consistent with
contemporary standards of decency," U.S. Attorney for Utah Paul
Warner and assistant U.S. attorney Robert Lund write in a court brief.

The question of whether Angelos' mandatory minimum prison term is
constitutional or violates the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against
cruel and unusual punishment will be argued Tuesday before the 10th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver. The appeal of Angelos'
conviction and sentence is being closely watched.

Dozens of former federal judges and prosecutors - including former
Attorneys General Janet Reno, Benjamin Civiletti, Griffin Bell and
Nicholas Katzenbach and former FBI director William Sessions - have
signed a friend-of-the-court brief agreeing with Angelos that his
sentence is unconstitutional.

"Irrational" Punishment?

The case that has caused such a furor began
as a run-of-the-mill drug prosecution.

Angelos, now 26, the founder of Extravagant Records, was accused of
selling marijuana to a police informant three times in May and June
2002, each time charging $350 for 8 ounces. At one sale, he had a gun
strapped to his ankle, according to court records. At the other drug
buys, there were firearms in the vicinity.

A federal grand jury originally indicted Angelos in November 2002 on
one gun possession count, three counts of marijuana distribution and
two lesser charges. After he rejected a plea bargain that would have
sent him to prison for 16 years, prosecutors obtained a new indictment.

This one had 20 charges. When Angelos later asked to reopen
negotiations, prosecutors said it was too late. In December 2003, a
jury convicted him of 16 counts.

U.S. District Judge Paul Cassell reluctantly sentenced Angelos to a
mandatory 55 years in prison, five years for the first gun-possession
conviction and 25 years each for the next two, to be served one after
the other. For 13 drug and money laundering counts, the judge imposed
one additional day behind bars.

Cassell said federal minimum mandatory sentencing laws left him no
choice but to mete out what he called an "unjust and cruel and even
irrational" prison term. He then urged President Bush to commute the
term to a more just punishment and called on Congress to modify the
law so that 25-year multiple sentences apply only to "true recidivist
drug offenders."

Serious Crime, Serious Time

The U.S. Attorney's Office contends that
Angelos is the kind of offender Congress had in mind when it enacted
tough mandatory sentences for criminals who carry a firearm while
committing a felony.

Prosecutors say Angelos sold large quantities of drugs and kept guns
in his Salt Lake City apartment while doing business. In addition,
they claim, he has ties with a street gang.

"Unquestionably, Congress was also informed with statistical data
related to the nature and prevalence of drug trafficking and gun
violence in this country, and the enormous financial and sociological
costs associated with the problem," their brief says.

Prosecutors also say the potential for time off for good behavior
should be taken into consideration, pointing out that Angelos'
sentence could be reduced to about 46 years.

But defense attorney Jerome Mooney says the punishment is grossly
disproportionate to the offense and a mandatory sentence law "is only
likely to deter juries from convicting drug offenders, fearful of the
application of horrific sentences that shock their conscience."

The appeal also challenges the legality of the search of Angelos'
apartment and the claim that he "brandished" a gun during drug sales
or even had one with him during the transactions.

The only person who claims to have seen a firearm at two of the
marijuana transactions was an informant who received a "complete
pass" on his own armed drug sales in return for his help, Mooney
says. The lawyers contend no mention was made in initial police
reports of a gun.

The government responds that the informant saw a 10 mm Glock pistol
lodged between the seat and center console of Angelos' BMW during the
first sale and the music producer lifted his pant leg to show the
same gun in an ankle holster during the second sale.

"Displaying a firearm in that regard clearly constitutes use and
brandishing," the prosecutors' brief says.

Angelos' relatives were shocked when the long sentence was handed
down. They now are hoping for a reversal and Weldon Angelos' release
from a federal prison in Southern California.

Sister Lisa Angelos said the wait is the hardest part. "This has
totally devastated the family," she said.
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