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Missouri Man Serving Life Without Parole for Marijuana Asks Governor for Clemency

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http://blogs.riverfronttimes.com/dailyrft/2013/10/missouri_man_serving_life_in_p.php

For the past 20 years, Chris Mizanskey, now 33, has had to go to prison to see his father. But his dad, Jeff, is not a murderer or a rapist. He was, however, busted for possession of about five pounds of pot, his third marijuana-related felony. And in Missouri, if you get three drug felonies, even if it's just marijuana, you can get life without parole.

Meanwhile, during the past two decades, Chris has seen a sea change in marijuana laws, as several states have legal pot for medicine and two states have it for recreational use. So lately he has been wondering why his dad is sentenced to die in prison for something that most of America considers harmless -- and he wants Missouri Governor Jay Nixon to address his concerns by granting his father clemency.

"I think twenty years is more than enough," Chris tells Daily RFT. "My dad never hurt anybody. He never killed anybody. He made some mistakes, but he's paid more than enough."

Jeff's troubles began on December 18, 1993, when he drove his friend, Atilano Quintana, to a Super 8 motel in Sedalia to meet two men. Jeff says he thought they were going to meet two men to discuss moving furniture to New Mexico for Quintana's sister, who had recently moved there. To this day, he claims he had no clue Quintana was going there to buy a few pounds of marijuana.

And Quintana didn't know that the two friends who were in the motel with the brick of weed had just been busted the day before -- with thirteen bricks of marijuana -- and were coerced to participate in a sting operation to nab more buyers, which is why there were cops and surveillance equipment in the adjoining room. You can guess what happened next.

Although Quintana was in possession of the package when he and Jeff were arrested and the surveillance video clearly suggests he was the one making the purchase, he was given a ten-year sentence for possession with intent to distribute, a Class B felony.

For the same charge, Jeff, who was busted in 1984 for selling an ounce of pot to an undercover cop and again in 1991 for possession of more than 35 grams of marijuana, got life without parole. He had never before done prison time, never had a violent offense, and his pot convictions did not have aggravating factors, such as involving minors or an illegal firearm. But none of that mattered because of an archaic Missouri law.

The story continues: http://blogs.riverfronttimes.com/dailyrft/2013/10/missouri_man_serving_life_in_p.php
 
holy shit five pounds of something that should and is becoming legal... I propose that the sick judge who gave him that sentence be put in there instead. How in the world do these people get in power and how do these insane laws ever get passed. Let this man and every other non violent drug offender out you sick sick sick criminals.
 
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^the judge might be a bad guy anyway, but I don't think the law gave him a choice in this case. Three strike laws are automatic.
 
The people need to stand up and refuse to accept this nonsense.
The leaders never will lead in a moral direction, so it is up to the people to lead, and the leaders will follow.
 
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