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Does This Make You Feel Safer? Kid Gets 26 Years For Selling Marijuana

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TEEN GETS 26 YEARS FOR SELLING GRASS
Toronto Sun | April 29, 2003 | Jason Botchford

Webster Alexander is 19 years old and his life's dreams are already lost. A teenage fervor for marijuana has cost him more than lapses of memory or bronchitis. Alexander's relationship with pot has cost him 26 years, a hit by the drug war in the U.S. designed to stop the use of marijuana. The results have been questionable as the U.S. continues to have one of the highest marijuana consumption rates in the world.

In the buckle of the Bible Belt is Moulton, Alabama, a town not much bigger than a black-eyed pea, lost in America's Deep South. The folks who live here don't normally get much international interest. They like it that way.

But that changed in January when Lawrence County Circuit Judge Philip Reich sentenced Alexander to 26 years in prison after convicting him of selling 28-gram handfuls of marijuana on four different occasions to an undercover cop masquerading as a student.

It was Alexander's first offence and he pleaded guilty. His sentence -- a plea bargain -- can't be appealed, but his lawyer is working to show Alexander has changed his life. A judge can give Alexander probation instead of jail time for some, or even all, of the 26 years.

"That's a long, long time to go," Alexander said. "I am just so sorry for what I've done. I want the court to see that. I am a completely different man than I was then."

Alexander's story first appeared on news wires in January, a non-descript story filed by an Associated Press reporter who lives nearby. But when pro-marijuana activists caught wind of it, Alexander's face was soon plastered on posters, first in Canada and then around the world.

Sympathizers cried foul over what could be one of the harshest sentences ever given to a first-time offender convicted of small-time dealing. Comparative sentencing statistics aren't available in the U.S.

A similar conviction in Canada would likely lead to a conditional sentence or fine. Even people convicted for running multi-million-dollar grow operations rarely see jail time here.

If there is any such thing as a good ol' southern boy -- using the best possible meaning of the phrase -- Alexander is it.

Rugged and weathered with a farm-tough bluntness mixed with tender sweetness, Alexander is all Alabama. He was raised in a dirt-brown trailer on the limb of a horizon-swallowing cattle pasture where he still lives.

He grew up with two brothers, two step-brothers and a sister. One brother is in jail, another in the air force. Now he lives with his parents, sister, niece, nephew, a pit bull named "Redneck," a dachshund with a nose for trouble, cages full of chickens, 10 miniature goats and some cockatiels.

With a C-grade average, football was his future. Entering high school, he was a top player in the county. The trophies he earned line shelves inside a garage his dad turned into a rec room on their property.

Alexander was counting on a college scholarship to pay for an education that, he hoped, would lead to a job as a physical education teacher and basketball coach.

Alexander's conviction means he can't ever earn a scholarship, can never be a teacher and makes him ineligible for a post-secondary loan, according to state law. He can't even vote.

Marijuana was part of the culture Alexander grew up in. His dad has been busted twice, most recently in 1999, and grew plants on the property. Alexander smoked his first joint when he was just nine years old. At 17 he was smoking regularly.

"A lot of the reason I started smoking was my friends because they all did drugs and it just seemed like the thing," Alexander said.

"If I never got started on drugs, none of this would have happened."

Last February, Alexander needed just a couple of credits to get his high school diploma. That's when a 19-year-old transfer student enrolled at Lawrence County High. The second day the "new kid" was in school, he was making plans to buy pot from Alexander who had no idea he was befriending a 26-year-old narc from the Lawrence County Drug Task Force.

On April 9, as the agent set up his fourth buy from Alexander, police swarmed his family's trailer. The gig was up. They arrested Alexander at gunpoint. Alexander's mom, Wanda, called during the raid, when the police were in her home.

"I asked to speak with my son and the man who answered said, 'This is the Lawrence County Sheriff's Department, you can't talk to Webster,' " Wanda said. "All I could think was 'I got to get home. I got to get home to my baby.' "

Wanda said she couldn't believe what she saw when she made it home.

"My house was destroyed and they had taken my baby to jail."

Alexander was charged with four counts of distribution of marijuana, one count of first-degree possession and one count of possession of drug paraphernalia for rolling papers, scales and a pipe.

"When they first got to my house, I was good," Alexander said. "I thought it was going to be how when other people get busted, they go in and soon are released.

"But I found out that wasn't going to happen to me. The cell door slammed. The bars crashed shut in front of me and I realized how serious it was. I was scared to death that I was never going to get out."

His uncle was able to put together the $90,000 needed to bail him out.

The news of Alexander's arrest was actually welcomed by his family. They wanted him off drugs and this was possibly the wake-up call they had been seeking. But when Wanda was told how many years in prison the prosecution was seeking, everything changed.

"If they had busted him and not tried to hang him, I would have shook their hands, but they're trying to hang my son," Wanda said.

"That's what I don't understand. He's just a child."

Enter John Mayes, a lawyer for 26 years, the only one in the county who handles nothing but criminal cases. He is big, conservative and southern. In his small brick office in the middle of Moulton he has a portrait of Ronald Reagan and a life-size painting of southern Civil War Gen. Robert E. Lee. He calls people from the north "Yankees."

Even for a staunch southern conservative, the marijuana laws seem oddly harsh in Alabama. The state does not differentiate between so-called hard drugs, such as heroin and cocaine, and a soft drug like marijuana.

"Alabama does not rehabilitate criminals," Mayes said. "We just punish them. They don't even teach trades in prison."

When Mayes worked out Alexander's plea bargain, his office was bombarded. Powerful marijuana lobby groups swung into action and soon everybody wanted to talk to Mayes: CNN, New York newspapers, media in Holland.

"I could have been a celebrity but I do not want that," Mayes said. "I didn't do any interviews. I'm here to help Webster."

The pro-marijuana lobby group NORML ( National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws ) was the first to make contact. NORML posted Alexander's story on the Internet. Representatives called the Alexanders and promised what seemed like the world. Webster's mom said they promised to launch an appeal and pay for her son's defence.

"We're just a small town country family, we didn't know what to do, we didn't know how to contact these people," Wanda said.

"The marijuana groups promised us so much. They said they would help and they wanted us to fire John."

Local pro-marijuana lobbies wanted Alexander to be a spokesman.

"There is no question in my mind if the marijuana groups were involved, Webster would have no chance at probation and he would be going to jail for every one of those 26 years," Mayes said. "And they'd probably raise money using his name as he was serving those 26 years.

"There were people who were going to say, 'Judge, don't put Webster to prison because the law he was convicted under is stupid and if you weren't so stupid, judge, you would realize these drugs should be legal.' "

The Alexanders never saw a nickel from any marijuana group. They never fired Mayes, who is leading an appeal. Mayes is hopeful Alexander can avoid some of the jail time, convinced it is the best decision he's made.

Alexander now undergoes regular drug tests and has been clean for a year. He got a high school diploma from a private school he enrolled in. He volunteers with young kids, telling them his story, warning them to try and live a good, clean life.

"I just hope I can go to college and live a good life," Alexander said. "I am just hoping I can turn this all around."

Mayes is with him.

"The penitentiary is no place for a young person," Mayes said. "It's like throwing someone in a garbage can."
 
Well, they WERE going to legalize weed here in Canada. Then the good ol' USofA threatened to make border crossing hell if we did.

The next week, the legalization of marijuanna was turned into a fine for anyone caught possessing 15 grams or less. Dealing and growing will still be illegal.

If anyone thought the threats made by the US had no impact of the upcoming changes, then why would the Canadian gov'nt preview the new law to the Americans BEFORE their own parliament.

The gov'nt should be seen and not heard.......fuckerzzzzzz.
 
this is complete and utter bull shit.

this kid gets 26 years, because alcohol and cigarette companies don't want the competition? because we have some people in government trying to enforce their passe puritanical beliefs on the rest of us?

this is an example of a gross abuse of power, within our criminal justice system. murder your wife, rape some kids, boil your baby alive, and you will most likely get a slap on the wrist, or nothing at all. sell some harmless plants to another persom, and get sent to a living death in america's correctional institutions.

:rolleyes: :mad:
 
I'm disgusted. I woke up with a throbbing cock to read this?

WE ARE TALKING ABOUT A PLANT, FOLKS.

There are no chemical wastes produced during production, you don't use needles to get high (no threat of spreading HIV or other blood-born pathogens), and you can't even O.D. on it!

How STUPID was this conviction?

I hope this judge gets written up for speeding and is sentenced to a year or two in prison for it. I'm willing to bet more people die each year in auto accidents resulting from driving over the legal limit than have died in the last century from marijuana use.

We haven't even begun to talk about alcohol. When was the last time you heard of someone driving drunk getting 26 years? We ALL know how deadly drinking and driving is. WTF!?!?

In the voice of 2Thick, "DOOOOOOOOOOOOMMED!"

This CAN'T be the USA, can it? :confused:
 
My uncle shot a guy 4 times in the chest...Then tried to hide the body...Idiot got caught...His sentence....26 years....

What a waste, this poor kid is getting screwed as a statement....

Sux

Ranger
 
dealing 4 times, growing it out of his property, possessing paraphanelia (sp?), I think maybe 15 years would've been enough, 26 just sounds too harsh.
 
That article was hard to swallow. I don't know much about drug laws in the US, but I had a friend that got caught dealing weed. He was caught with about 1/2 a pound and went to jail for a month. I never found out any details.

Everyone should be able to see that 26 years is beyond ridiculous. Let's not even talk about the fact that marijuana is relatively harmless!
 
Here in bloomington, possession of coke or heroin is a class B felony, punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Its the same legal class you get for rape or child molesting (with mitigating circumstances) Its disgusting how these laws are permitted. But what can people do about them? I have no idea.
 
I will fight for his substantially reduced sentence. What fucking morons. They make me sick.
 
Remember when Nancy Reagan wanted the death penalty for drug dealers? What a truly pathetic individual.
 
p0ink said:
this is complete and utter bull shit.

this kid gets 26 years, because alcohol and cigarette companies don't want the competition? because we have some people in government trying to enforce their passe puritanical beliefs on the rest of us?

this is an example of a gross abuse of power, within our criminal justice system. murder your wife, rape some kids, boil your baby alive, and you will most likely get a slap on the wrist, or nothing at all. sell some harmless plants to another persom, and get sent to a living death in america's correctional institutions.

:rolleyes: :mad:


Well I think we know republicans are the real champions of the drug war, you don't have to look any further than Ashcroft to see how that mentality can become frightening.

But the dems haven't done a whole lot of good in changing things in this area at all either.

All pandering. Pandering to the soccer moms and the pharma companies, panerding to the tobacco lobby and the liquor lobby



Hopefully when this decripit shit generation dies off we'll see some change from a newer more enlightened generation....but these were the people who grew up in the 60s so who the hell knows
 
we are gonna wake up one day and everyone is going to be in prison. the war on drugs(war on our citizens) is a disaster and should end.
 
Damn right Sponge & frack. The drug war is fascist in nature. It proclaims that the individual is irrelevant, and only his obedience to the welfare of the state matters. Gross punishments are handed out for 'defaming' the state via the drug war.

And it is ironic that many modern soccer moms and baby boomers who the drug war is targeted at were probably hippies in their youth. Maybe our generation will do something about the drug war but i have no idea. Destroying people's lives/careers isn't the way to go, there are better ways.
 
Making this kid an example for a desired premise that they will never adhere to will change nothing but the lack of future for this kid.
 
There may be a bright side to this though. Sentences like that will do a lot to enrage and wake people up. This will create controversy in regards to cannabis. Just like elderly patients getting arrested for using cannabis in a medical fashion. This may be the beginning of the winds of change. At some point someone will say enough is enough.
 
gwl9dta4 said:
There may be a bright side to this though. Sentences like that will do a lot to enrage and wake people up. This will create controversy in regards to cannabis. Just like elderly patients getting arrested for using cannabis in a medical fashion. This may be the beginning of the winds of change. At some point someone will say enough is enough.

i dont thinki this story will do much, because it is from april, and i have yet to hear any of the major news outlets cover it.

let's hope, though.
 
This begs the question:

Are Americans truly FREE?
 
guards said:
This begs the question:

Are Americans truly FREE?

depends on how you define free. We are relatively free by 3rd world standards, but in certain areas we lag behind most western countries.
 
guards said:
This begs the question:

Are Americans truly FREE?

i think the idea of one country being more free than another is all relative.

for instance, i value my rights to own a variety of guns, more than i would value the ability to smoke weed in public, without going to jail. others would rather have it the other way around.
 
This is sick and disgusting. Is this going to make the world a better place to live ? No. Is smoking weed a big deal ? No. Then why are we still wasting time on this ?
 
unlike canadian police, who only bust up major grow ops ran by the hell's angels or some vietamese gangs and let the average user off with a warning, our law enforcement likes to spend billions to catch and imprison small-time, teenage dealers.

politicians can use gross abuse of power like this to help sure up their re-election campaigns. they can use cases like this to tell the soccer moms, the far right, etc that they are keeping us 'safe', by locking up fellow citizens that have a different idea of relaxing than the norm.
 
The war on drugs failed a long time ago. It is even more out of hand than during prohibition. Imagine the amount of money spent each year to bring in every pothead with an 1/8 or 1/4 in their pocket. Not to mention higher amounts. There are probably 1,000,000 people each year convited of possesion of canabis. The war has failed, the govt. "educational programs" have failed b/c many people can see bullshit and hypocrisy when its there.
 
OK so we all think this is BS so what are we going to do about it?

Someone get some links to people ..like the judge or some newspapers in the area and lets wrote some emails.
 
p0ink said:
unlike canadian police, who only bust up major grow ops ran by the hell's angels or some vietamese gangs and let the average user off with a warning, our law enforcement likes to spend billions to catch and imprison small-time, teenage dealers.

politicians can use gross abuse of power like this to help sure up their re-election campaigns. they can use cases like this to tell the soccer moms, the far right, etc that they are keeping us 'safe', by locking up fellow citizens that have a different idea of relaxing than the norm.

I'm truly amazed by the "soccer mom" phenomena. What is it exactly ?
 
well i look at it this way if our founding fathers were here i think that they would start another american revolution.



think about this our modern day govt is like a big organized crime unit you have the soliders(armed services),underbosses(senate and the house)then the godfather(president).
 
manny78 said:


I'm truly amazed by the "soccer mom" phenomena. What is it exactly ?


They are a bunch of ex-hippies/baby boomers who ended up being stay at home moms who drive SUVs and mini vans and view their kids at their lives.
 
p0ink said:
unlike canadian police, who only bust up major grow ops ran by the hell's angels or some vietamese gangs and let the average user off with a warning, our law enforcement likes to spend billions to catch and imprison small-time, teenage dealers.

politicians can use gross abuse of power like this to help sure up their re-election campaigns. they can use cases like this to tell the soccer moms, the far right, etc that they are keeping us 'safe', by locking up fellow citizens that have a different idea of relaxing than the norm.


i made the same post a while ago. Its even more lax than that.
 
nordstrom said:



They are a bunch of ex-hippies/baby boomers who ended up being stay at home moms who drive SUVs and mini vans and view their kids at their lives.


As well as being bored and thinking its their job to get in everyone's business.
 
how can they set up 4 different buys/stings with the kid? that's like fucking a undercover cop posing as a prostitute, but not getting him the first, getting him the 4th. is that crap legal?
 
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