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Beaten, Tortured and Sentenced 25-to-Life for Minor Drug Offense

By Randy Credico, Huffington Post. Posted November 22, 2008.


Enough is enough. It's time to repeal the Rockefeller Drug Laws, a 36-year failed experiment in racism, injustice and government waste.

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"Woe to those who make unjust laws,

to those who issue oppressive decrees,

to deprive the poor of their rights,

and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people"

- Isaiah 10:1

 

Often, during days that never seem to end, Anthony Williams will repair to a corner of his dark, dank, cell in the Eastern Correctional Facility in upstate New York. This is where he ponders, meditates, and prays. And prays and prays, using his faith to rekindle fading dreams that someday, soon, his nightmare will come to a merciful end. Then he rises to write yet another pro se motion, casting it like bread upon the waters of justice, hoping this will be the one that will not be denied by yet another faceless judge.

We of the outside world, even in our wildest imaginations, might never fully comprehend the life of Anthony Williams. Among the many cases chronicled by this office over a dozen years -- and we sometimes imagine that have seen it all -- none causes more loss of sleep than knowledge of the dreadful plight of Anthony Williams.

Williams is serving a 25-year-to-life sentence for a "mickey mouse" drug offense that occurred in Albany County back in 1991. Anthony has already served more than 17 years of that sentence, dragged in chains from one maximum-security prison to the next. Though he is among the least of small offenders, he is serving the longest of times. He just can't find his way home from perpetual exile behind thick walls trimmed with razor wire.

Yet, somehow, he remains optimistic and fights on. As does his cancer-stricken mother, Pastor Nazimova, a leader of the Mothers of the New York Disappeared.

From the onset, Williams' criminal justice journey has been a horror show. Prior to even being charged, he was sequestered for eight hours in a motel room, where his arrest took place. During this ordeal, he was tortured and beaten senseless by rogue elements of the Albany Police Department's "Special Investigation Unit." Long before the degrading excesses of Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo, these police "interrogators" tried to forcibly extract "information" that Williams could not provide. Ultimately, he had to be rushed by ambulance from the motel to the county hospital for emergency care.

Fearful of having their brutal tactics exposed, the police then fabricated their alleged "big case "against Williams. After a painful recovery from extensive and severe wounds, his broken body and tattered soul were transported to the county courthouse, where the African-American youth was quickly convicted by an all-white jury and then punted to the state's dangerous prison system by the late, notorious "hanging judge," Thomas Keegan.

Williams' woeful tale reads like an Americanized version of a Russian novel -- a tome written in four full boxes of records concerning his arrest, interrogation, trial, incarceration and appeals.

Anthony Williams' best hope for relief came, and went, a few years ago, in 2004 and 2005, when minor "reforms" to New York's notorious "Rockefeller Drug Laws" provided him with zero relief.

Ironically, he was too small a fish in the ocean of the illicit drug trade to benefit from what have since proven to be anemic legislative charades. Most of the drug offenders who were re-sentenced and released under those incremental "reforms" had convictions for the possession or the sale of large quantities of illegal narcotics. But treacherous, counterintuitive twists in the "reform legislation" actually made it impossible for many low-level offenders to get retroactive relief. As a result, new provisions of the law did not apply in their particular cases -- which is why only a handful of offenders had their sentences reduced.


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View:
Who profits from private prisons?
Posted by: Lauren on Nov 22, 2008 1:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hope
Posted by: gellero1 on Nov 22, 2008 2:08 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the Messiah is serious about change..............he'll exert a progressive pressure against the narco terror of the Authorities.

I'd like to hope and believe in 'change'....................but I don't think he'll voice any opinion. Sad to see the incoming administration ideologically corrupted so early.

Plus ca change, plus la meme chose...............

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» RE: Hope!? From a politician? Posted by: Nightstallion
» RE: Hope!? From a politician? Posted by: kungfuma
» RE: Hope Posted by: Lauren
» it's a sobriquet Posted by: gellero1
» Humor is funny. Posted by: pelican beak
» RE: Hope Posted by: kungfuma
Need More Details About Specifics - WHAT Kind of Drugs Was He Arrested With?
Posted by: colleenwhalen on Nov 22, 2008 3:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The article is deliberately vague by refusing to give actual details regarding what kind of drugs the fellow was found with when arrested. It also failed to mention if he had prior arrests.

I'm open minded and want to give this fellow the benefit of a doubt - but the author of this article is breaking basic journalism rules. I need more of the Who, What, Where, When, Why regarding the details of the arrest.

It goes without saying I am appalled the fellow was visciously beaten and the sadistic cops got off scott free - shades of Rodney King beatings. I'm also disgusted by the "Hanging Judge" - if this kid had been white and middle class - he'd have gotten probation, counseling, house arrest and community service instead of a 17 year prision term.

The author also fails to mention if while in prison the fellow got involved in prison fights and behavior infractions? I am not assuming the fellow who was sent to prison has done anything "wrong" - the article fails to give so many specific details which are crucial.

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» More than likely,pot Posted by: donl51
Justice, American Style
Posted by: bryangalt on Nov 22, 2008 3:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The similarities to how we are treating the alleged "enemy combatants" and the "drug users" is a telling portrait of the true American view on what is "justice."

Let's look at another comparison. President Bush, former President Clinton and President Elect Obama have all admitted or implied that they too have hit the bong/joint/etc in their lifetime and yet they managed to make it all the way to the Presidency.

Imagine if they had been arrested and tossed into a cell for the rest of their lives for a small possession charge. Our nation would only have reaped a benefit from Bush missing out his turn! But Obama would not have become the inspiration to the world that he is. Clinton would never have become the stateman that he is.

Who knows what damage we have done to ourselves with the draconian barbarism and contempt heaped upon those poor men and women caught up in the "machine." Perhaps one of those tens of thousands and even millions of people who were merely testing the waters of life would have cured cancer, or invented the self-sustaining battery, or invented the technology that could have saved us all from the soon-to-be hair raising side effects of global warming.

We can never know the damages we have done to brothers and sisters by standing and watching, as we allowed their inhumane treatment to break them down, grind them up and spit them out.

We will certainly know what damage we have done to ourselves when we arrive at our judgement, and find that the gateway to a restful peace is locked to those who have no souls to save.

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» RE: Justice, American Style Posted by: Lauren
Don Quixot
Posted by: Don Quixote on Nov 22, 2008 4:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't know how many people Stalin had in concentration camps, but the US has 2.3 million of people in jail, a much higher percentage than any other democracy. Sorry to tell you, the US really looks barbaric to many Europeans.

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» RE: Don Quixot Posted by: sirios
» RE: Don Quixot Posted by: StirMan
» RE: Don Quixot Posted by: Truelass
Yea, Verily I concur agree, and totally support all the above authors complaint, and addend this:
Posted by: Nightstallion on Nov 22, 2008 4:26 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That everyone so accused, jailed, sentenced or their offspring relatives or wives if they themselves are no longer living a singular flat restitution award of $25,000,000.00 each per prisoner to be paid from the State’s coffers, Federal Coffers and the incomes of the Judges who allowed the law to stand unchallenged. Along with the State and Federal Legislative boards that designed and passed this bill into law also, be made responsible monetarily to the Victims and families so affected.

Further that any Judge who fails to impeach himself of these crimes against humanity, if he partook of them; be barred from office and ordered out of the State they serve or were serving at the time.

But then I am an excitable boy.

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Can we do the same for Corrupt Politicians?????
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Nov 22, 2008 7:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This story proves out the theroy that the rich always want a scapegoat to blame the evils of the society to lay blame on. Too bad it's actually the rich that are the problem!!!!!

How well would Dick Cheney hold up to a sound thrashing and a plunger anal probe 'before' they questioned him about shooting another old coot in the face??

How about Georgie...would he have caved in under a beatdown at the cop-shop over 9/11 and the Irag War. No it seems you can screw your country over as president and you never have to andwer to anyone. The law is fair...BULLSHIT!!

If you're far enough up the social ladder you get to 'Freedomland' it's a $250,000 buy-in. You need a sustained incoem above $300,000,must drive a BMW,at the least,and have a 5 million dollar house and you wife must be named 'Biffy' Then you're worthy of all the Freedom and Liberty you can handle!!!!

If you live in a poor neighborhood,OK but not Ghetto,listen to the wrong music,have the wrong friends,drive the wrong car...YOU'RE A TARGET. If you actually live in the 'Hood' or the 'Projects' it don't matter who you are,you're gulity. So...If you're rich,drugs are OK...If you're poor your ass is getting beaten,molested,thrown in a dark hole and only see the sun when it's time for your turn in Kangaroo Court.

The drug war was created to cover up the drug use by the rich,plian and simple. Everytime the average Joe started to aquire anything even close to what the 'Uppercrust' had, Kablam!!! New laws were created to help keep folks down. That part of human history always repeats itself and we never seem to get off it. The same is true now.

The only logical,sane answer to the so-called 'Drug Problem' is to make it a non-problem. You legalize all drugs!!!!
You like hard shit like coke and heroin....get a script form your Doc. Like Pot and mushrooms,grom your own. Like tripping your ass off,get a script from you friendly neighborhood Headshrinker. End of problem,end of beatings. The only folks that might have a problem with this idea are the idiots that think they have the right to control you because they feel you're too stupid to make your own choices in life. Fuck Them!!! They made this mess.

Every year there are thousands of rapes,molestations,beatdowns and assults created from drinking,and that doesn't even begin to address the deaths cause by drink. When was the last time the town drunk got severly mistreated for being drunk??? I'll bet it wasn't before at least 5 potheads got beat for smoking a joint in a back alley.

Personally, I think it's high-time we gave corrupt politicians the same treatment we give drug offenders now. I think the cops should arrest Bush,Cheney and all their stooges and give them a good old fashioned 'Crossbar Hotel Welcoming' I'll bet more folks would think twice before they fuck the country over like they did. But then again,they're rich so that will probably never happen.

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SOME THOUGHTS ON PAROLES
Posted by: shd1230 on Nov 22, 2008 7:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Funny how minor drug offenses are treated so severely, in the light of the leniency and tendency toward paroling serial rapists and child molesters.

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SIMPLE ANSWER
Posted by: shd1230 on Nov 22, 2008 7:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
THERE IS A SIMPLE ANSWER TO THE CRIMES SURROUNDING ILLEGAL DRUGS--MAKE THEM LEGAL. IF PEOPLE REALLY WANT TO DESTROY THEIR LIVES WITH DRUGS, THEY WILL FIND A WAY TO DO IT. GIVE THEM SAFE DRUGS AND LET THEM ZONE OUT UNTIL THEY GET READY TO GO INTO REHAB--OR DIE. PRISON ONLY REINFORCES DRUG USE.

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» RE: SIMPLELER ANSWER Posted by: donl51
"Rogue Element" is part of the system accepted by too many!
Posted by: marid on Nov 22, 2008 9:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All too often the only difference between the criminal and the enforcer of the Laws is which side of the Jail door they are on. Our legal system breeds and protects the Monsters within the system giving an impression that also lowers the opinion and trust for the vast majority of good officers we have serving us.

8 hours of interrogation? Criminal, illegal, unethical, unAmerican but it goes on all too often. But when the people at the top of the pile make and break any law they choose, do you wonder why the small fish do too? Remember the Law of Gravity, crap runs down hill.

When you have an administration that signs laws and then turns over the peice of paper and says that they won't follow them is it any wonder the rot grows? When you have govt. officials ignoring subpeonas, which would land most of us in jail, is it any wonder the rot spreads?

When you have "private contractors" commiting egregious crimes in foreign coutries but they are not held accountable, is it any wonder the rot spreads?

The basic honesty and integrity of America is rotting from the top down, exacerbated by an economy run to benefit the few. The private prison system is right there to harvest the poor souls cast into it. What a horrible thing to allow a private business to profit from the misfortune and misery of our people. How ow can we sink? Stay tuned and bring a snorkle.

One thing I missed in the articla was the exact charges against the young man.

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Who, What, When, Where and Why: Did you forget?
Posted by: seamallowance on Nov 22, 2008 9:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great story, but, sadly, a poorly-written article. This sort of laziness in prose does nothing to help our cause, it just makes us all look like a bunch of irrational frootbats.

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"Obama Drug Czar Pick: No Recovery from War on Drugs?"
Posted by: picket on Nov 22, 2008 9:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
an article in Huffington Post, 11/21/08 by Maia Szalavitz [an AlterNet contributor, last 7/07], discusses JIM RAMSTAD, who is rumored to be Obama's choice for Drug Czar. An article worth reading

Negatives: 1]....... "opposes medical MJ and supports federal policing and prosecution of providers and patients in states that have made it legal. 2]" ........opposes needle exchange that would decrease HIV, esp in D.C. which has the highest rate of HIV, apparently in the Nation.......3] He is a Republican Congressman.

Positive: Maybe??? He is a recovering alcoholic that supports insurance coverage for addictions.

I could be wrong but the one +++++ does NOT outweigh the -----'s.

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New York is a real police state and one must be always aware of this...
Posted by: TJColatrella on Nov 22, 2008 11:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's frightening what our nation and this state New York in particular is capable of...

This draconian law and abusive of power smacks of a human rights violation..!

Many people in upstate New York are afraid to leave their homes after dark due to the multiple layers of police out there with nothing to do to justify their existence..

I hate to hear these stories, and shame on Andrew Cuomo and Governor Patterson for turning their back on such a long term injustice...

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More facts please
Posted by: surfreality on Nov 22, 2008 1:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
like, what, how much, why, when, where. Who testified, who was his attorney, what did the hospital report say about his injuries? Does he have a prior record? On what basis does the DA refuse to approve parole? Is he a model inmate? And most importantly, given that this story has merit, HOW DO WE HELP?

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» RE: More facts please Posted by: the third man
We can't just let them get away with it, can we?
Posted by: willymack on Nov 22, 2008 1:42 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we did, there wouldn't be all that drug money for our banks to launder, kickbacks to crooked cops and public officials, funding for CIA "black ops", and enormous profits for private prisons. We coundn't have that now, could we?

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bush should...
Posted by: undrgrndgirl on Nov 22, 2008 4:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
pardon this man and troy davis...

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» RE: bush should... Posted by: StirMan
The Drug War is a Waste of My Time...
Posted by: joeocho88 on Nov 22, 2008 5:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think it is rather ironic that the same people who are screaming for TOUGHER DRUG LAWS and GET TOUGH ON CRIME are the same people who benefit the most from the status quo and that is having the Drug War Farce.

I have never heard of a politician who wasn't caught accepting campaign contributions from the wrong folks returning the contribution and you had better believe that plenty of laundered drug money is being contributed to these "Law and Order" types.

I am a firm believer that you should let the dope come on in and let the junkies overdose and GOOD RIDDANCE!

If drugs WERE legal, the deficit would be paid off in a matter of years and the profit motive would be gone and the people who are getting so much of their liquidity from the drug trade would have to find something else.

It is better for them if drugs remain illegal and they continue the charade of THE DRUG WARS.

They don't work. Legislation against alcohol didn't work and legislation against drugs wont work either --it just drives up the prices for the guys in charge.

I don't see why I should get shot and killed so that some guy can't smoke his marijuana joint. I don't use marijuana so if those narcotrafficantes had to depend on me as a source of income,they would go broke in a hurry.

NO DEMAND.NO SUPPLIERS.

As long as there are IDIOTS who want to use the stuff -- alcohol OR drugs-- there will be a market for this stuff and people WILL get WHATEVER they have enough money to bet! AND THEY WILL FIND A WAY.SOMEBODY ALWAYS WILL.

The border fence is a no-bid contract BOONDOGGLE with political patronage for Chaney and associates. THE EXCUSE FOR THAT WAS THE DRUG CARTEL WARS to keep those drugs OUT of the USA and tying it neatly to the undocumented miserable people of Mexico who are forced to come here because of their socially irresponsible government and undercut American workers' jobs...This EAST GERMAN COMMUNIST-STYLE WALL FROM HELL just puts money in the pockets of Chaney's cronies and you KNOW he is going to get a percentage when he gets out of office!

THE ENTIRE DRUG WAR IS A DIRTY JOKE!

I am sorry for all of those in law enforcement who thought they were doing some good and who lost their lives in this futile attempt to beat the upper class at their own game but when they make the laws and the executive orders AND they finance the deals that make the drugs possible and keep them profitable, IT IS NOT WORTH MY LIFE!

I am NOT involved in the illicit drug traffic trade in ANY way. I also do not use illicit drugs or alcohol and think people who do are rather stupid.

Democrat.Republican. Two different LABELS for the SAME vial.

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here is the dope on williams
Posted by: the third man on Nov 22, 2008 5:40 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
since i know the case better than anyone, here is the skinny

mr. williams was convicted of two indirect sales of dime bags of cocaine. the person that actually sold the cocaine said they got it from williams on the stnad but later recanted and said the DA gave them leniency to finger williams. for that conviction williams recieved 12 to 25 years. the person that fingered williams still got 1 to 3 years in prison..he was also convicted of constructive possession of a half ounce of cocaine being that it was in the same room (in someone else's luggage)for that charge he got an 8 to life sentence.the judge ran the sentences consecutive and it came up to 25 to life..the woman who actually had the cocaine said in a letter to williams (i have a copy) that she was pressured into saying the cocaine was williams and she was sorry about the perjury but the police coerced her...the officer that coerced her false testimony was kicked off the force as were other members of the unit for similar untoward behavior to put it mildly in other case....the cops beat and tortured williams in an effort to find someone that they were looking for williams but williams was unable to provide that info ..u should see the hospital records. ..it was a total frame job by racist cowboy cops. albany county is one of the most racist bailiwicks in the nation. new york state would have abolished slavery at the turn of the 19th century if not for powerful slave interests in albany and other upstate counties where slavery was still in vogue. thus it did not end till 1827. albany has changed little since

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Randy Credico knows this subject well/heard him on radio today,again
Posted by: NYCartist on Nov 22, 2008 5:58 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Randy Credico was on "Al Lewis Lives", with Al's widow, Karen Lewis. Randy Credico has been involved with repeal of the Rockefeller Drug Laws for over a decade, going back to when no one in media was interested. Al Lewis got involved in 1998 (and was also running for Governor of NY State) and was regularly at the vigils at Rockefeller Center until he became ill. ("Grandpa" Al Lewis died in Feb.2006.)

Randy's interview with Karen Lewis can be heard free, archived for 90 days, from www.wbai.org online. Credico knows this subject well and is right.

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The laws all laws in this country are not even legaly emplaced.
Posted by: Nightstallion on Nov 23, 2008 6:16 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The entire Legal System is a Criminal Justice system in deed. That is I claim that IT the practice of Barristry is illegal. Our legal system was a grandfathering process in which the American people were not made privy to a vote on content!

The legal system in other countries have arisen out of a recognized necessity to impose laws to govern the misfits, abnormals, true Criminals and ner'do wells of society.

Those countries had the benefit of a parliament or a so called enlightened Despot to garner laws for the people that would not be to unappetizing or hard to tolerate by the general populace. If they didn’t do this it was their own rule that would suffer.

Enough! May it please you to know that we have become a third world Country because of this practice of laws, and other implements like them that have been subjugating Americans and not Ruling, or Leading them. You wanted security little American Woman at the cost of your liberty. You wanted marital peace little American Man so your days could be spent in stocking feet watching “THE GAME” with your buddies. So you sold your future and your children’s future to the most insidious slaver of all time the American Job Market. Well that market is a Predator! It is now going to eat you your wives your children their grand children and for what?

A chimera of supposed internal Security (where it isn’t even safe for you to walk the streets at night because of the Police Forces) and National Security that steals your right to travel internationally with dignity and self-confidence. (You are subject to personal searches that can be as repetitive as security agents want to make them and resistance is met with often lethal force!) Also, any complaint or bickering with an agent or Security Officer over personal preference or privacy WILL put you on a no fly list.

I was young once, I believed that I could manage my own security better than Joe Schmuck. I am now old and I STILL believe that. You and I have been sold a bill of goods by a Criminal in the White House and now we are complaining that the stuff tastes bad! Tough! I will not apologize for laying the SECURITY issue in the lap of the American Woman voters. I understand men are no damn good and they are Oinkers who are just always scheming ways to get into your skivvies. But, that did not give you the right to sell our country to the God damn NAZI fascists.

I am not a Democrat (DemonRat) or a Republican (RepubliCon) hell, I am not even STRAIGHT but I do not pander to those who would help the slave traders to kill us! No! Security is NOT more important than freedom, and I do not want to live in a country who will bow down to a bunch of hiding, cowardly, sniping, Black suited Jackbooted thugs who want to subdue me my family or my children.

Our Armed services are hired Mercenaries who owe no fealty to the American People because they are GIVEN none. I have spoken to quite a few who see it this way. They see Congress and the President as the ones who sign the paychecks not Bloody John Q Public.

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Justice?
Posted by: Harris20 on Nov 23, 2008 8:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Woe to those who make unjust laws,"

The author should not refer to the Bible as a source of just laws where punishment usually never fits the crime(It's pretty unjust to condemn a person to eternal hell just because he doesn't want to believe).

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» RE: Justice? Posted by: the third man
New Drug Czar???? Jim Ramstad, R-MN....Rated by NORML
Posted by: picket on Nov 23, 2008 10:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Norml's rating of lawmakers "ON ALL THE ISSUES"...Jim Ramstad on drugs...rated by NORML a -30 the lowest possible rating, a "hard-on-drugs"stance [12-2006]

http://www.ontheissues.org/House/Jim_Ramstad.htm

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The Low-Down on Williams and Drug Crimes!!!!!
Posted by: ds1st on Nov 23, 2008 11:26 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Williams had 6 other drug related convictions and molested a boy. He should get life in prison. Drugs are causing the downfall of the United States. There does need to be punishment.

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» you are a liar Posted by: the third man
» RE: WRONG - RE: you are liar Posted by: the third man
UPHOLDING THE LAW OR COPS IF YOU PREFER
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Nov 23, 2008 12:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a steady increase in police brutality over the past ten years. It's time to define the role of an arresting officer. They are not judge and jury. They do not decide on punishment. They are however, out of control. Yet another 19 yr. old was tasered 4 times and died. He had been arrested and was in "SHACKLES" at the time. But he died of natural causes. I say the cop murdered him. Drugs have been a problem in this country for 50 yrs. Nothing is done to put a stop to it. It is profitable from the orignal purchase right on up the line to rehab or sentencing to one of our many privately run prisons. It's the proverbial 'gift that keeps on giving'. So the arrests will continue, but the violence and brutality is unnecessary and not part of the justice system. If the cops are 'fearing for their lives' (tired of hearing that), they should go to work for the phone company. I never thought I'd hear myself talk this way about the police but they have become part of the problem. Somehow they have to be taught that they have limits and lines are clearly drawn. It's part of their training. Since nothing is being done to discourage the use of illegal drugs people dying in custody and being beaten by cops is probably not in anyone's best interest. Thanks, ANNA

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MY FIRST TRAFFIC STOP WAS FOR SOMETHING SOMEBODY ELSE DID. THE
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Nov 23, 2008 12:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OKLAHOMA HIGHWAY PATROLMAN was judge, jury, and exececutioner. Statistics show decisions for the defendant in traffic matters are less than two percent. How many classrooms have you been in where the average grade was 98%?

In their private lives people avoid cops. So cops buddy with other cops. They don't know any real people. Then they sit and reinforce each others prejudices. Policemen have become a caste unto themselves. They certainly don't represent the "good people" in the community.

They dare not represent the wealthy and the powerful. The wealthy and the powerful live in gated communities with a layer of private cops between them and actual law enforcement. Inside of their gated communities the do all of the things that plain folks go to jail for.

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williams complete record
Posted by: the third man on Nov 23, 2008 4:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
some sicko lied about williams past , that he had 6 priors and a sex charge...this is a bold face sick individual..here is the jacket on williams from the dept. of corrections..check out his DIM number and look for yourself..he did have a prior as you will see: for possession of a nickel bag of cocaine and a joint...

DIN (Department Identification Number) 92A1386
Inmate Name WILLIAMS, ANTHONY
Sex MALE
Date of Birth 11/28/1967
Race / Ethnicity BLACK
Custody Status IN CUSTODY
Housing Releasing Facility EASTERN
Date Received (Original) 02/18/1992
Date Received (Current) 02/18/1992
Admission Type NEW COMMITMENT
County of Commitment ALBANY
Latest Release Date / Type (Released Inmates Only)
Crimes of Conviction
If all 4 crime fields contain data, there may be additional crimes not shown here. In this case, the crimes shown here are those with the longest sentences.
As of 11/23/08 Crime Class
CRIM POSS CONTR SUBSTANCE 2ND A2
CRIM SALE CONTR SUBSTANCE 3RD B


Sentence Terms and Release Dates
Under certain circumstances, an inmate may be released prior to serving his or her minimum term and before the earliest release date shown for the inmate.
As of 11/23/08 Aggregate Minimum Sentence 025 Years, 00 Months, 00 Days
Aggregate Maximum Sentence LIFE Years, 99 Months, 99 Days
Earliest Release Date 01/24/2016
Earliest Release Type PAROLE ELIGIBILITY DATE
Parole Hearing Date 07/2011
Parole Hearing Type MERIT RELEASE APPEARANCE
Parole Eligibility Date 01/24/2016
Conditional Release Date NONE
Maximum Expiration Date LIFE
Maximum Expiration Date for Parole Supervision
Post Release Supervision Maximum Expiration Date
Parole Board Discharge Date

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08 DIN (Department Identification Number) 88B1393
Inmate Name WILLIAMS, ANTHONY
Sex MALE
Date of Birth 11/28/1967
Race / Ethnicity BLACK
Custody Status RELEASED
Housing Releasing Facility FRANKLIN
Date Received (Original) 07/26/1988
Date Received (Current) 07/26/1988
Admission Type
County of Commitment QUEENS
Latest Release Date / Type (Released Inmates Only) 03/30/89 PAROLE DIV OF PAROLE
Crimes of Conviction
If all 4 crime fields contain data, there may be additional crimes not shown here. In this case, the crimes shown here are those with the longest sentences.
As of 11/23/08 Crime Class
CRIM POSS CONTR SUBSTANCE 3RD B
CRIM POSS CONTR SUBSTANCE 4TH C

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» RE: williams complete record Posted by: NYCartist
WE HAVE THE BIGGEST PRISON SYSTEM ON THE FACE OF THE EARTH
Posted by: cori on Nov 23, 2008 11:11 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just think how much money we would save if we replaced paying non violent offenders with treatment programs and took away their felony charges so they could go to work? We are paying $40,000 per inmate per year and we thought welfare cost a lot! Our prison system is now a privatized growth industry that takes billions of our tax dollars with no oversight. Felons can't get jobs and it has become a revolving door system. We need more people like the mayor of Newark, Corey Booker.

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part that is missing from original williams oped part 1
Posted by: the third man on Nov 24, 2008 1:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For Anthony Williams' sake, and for the sake of thousands more Rockefeller "abductees," the solons of Albany could make history as giants of justice, rather than legislative Liliputians, when they reconvene this January.

In fact, they can make history by repeating history.

New York's leaders can do so by emulating the historic example of the Massachusetts in 1855, during what was then known as the "Hiss Legislature" (named after statehouse Speaker Joseph Hiss) -- a body which U.S. Senator Henry Wilson proclaimed as “the most radical anti-slavery state legislature ever chosen in America.”

In the aftermath of Boston's gruesome spectacle of a federal rendition trial and the U.S. warship retrieval of fugitive Virginia slave Anthony Burns, and the outlandish Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, which enabled the westward expansion of slavery, abolitionist fury and fever inflamed the Bay State. The alarum achieved such frenzy that it catalyzed an astonishing landslide victory for the newly formed anti-slavery party known as the “Massachusetts Know Nothings.”

Massachusetts' unique brand of “Know Nothing” politics was eclectically composed of what historian Albert Von Frank described as a “colorful group of rank amateurs.” Abolitionists and anti Kansas-Nebraska men took seats next to self-righteous prohibitionists, religious bigots, America-firsters and philanthropists. The overwhelming majority of these leaders were farmers, tradesmen, ministers, writers and lawyers. And none of these political “neophytes” had prior parliamentary experience.

Yet, in spite of, or perhaps because of their political “inexperience”, the "Hiss Legislature" nevertheless got things rolling fast and furiously -- particularly in the areas of civil rights and criminal justice. Their considerable accomplishments included the most extensive personal liberty law ever enacted; judicial exclusion of confessions and ex-parte testimony; an act empowering criminal juries to decide both the law and the facts, thereby giving the People the right to check the judicial abuses of power: i.e., jury nullification.

The Hiss legislature also abolished debtors' prison, outlawed segregation in public schools, passed progressive child labor laws, and enacted a married women's property rights, among numerous other progressive measures. Their feats prompted the Boston abolitionists' spiritual leader, the Rev. Theodore Parker, to proclaim at an 1855 July 4th celebration, “We are now making the greatest political experiment which the sun ever looked down upon.”

Today, David Paterson, Sheldon Silver and Malcolm Smith are on the cusp of similar historic potential -- if they so choose. They should seize this moment, for the opportunity may never return. It is incumbent upon these incumbents (and new legislators) to follow through on prior pledges including, but not limited to, repeal of the Rockefeller Drug Laws.

"Rockefeller" is just the beginning. A complete overhaul of the criminal justice system is desperately needed. A "racial profiling" bill is an essential start. The hack-laden process of judicial appointments must be reformed, as so many judges (disproportionately white and conservative) carry their prior biases as former assistant district attorneys onto their lofty, but hardly impartial, benches of justice. And, as in the case of the Hiss legislature, juries should share the right to decide not just fact, but also law. And, of course, an end to the detestable and unconstitutional and racist practice of “stop and frisk.” There is no place in an open society for the “round up the usual suspects” “ stop and frisk routine.

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the rest of the williams story part 2
Posted by: the third man on Nov 24, 2008 1:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
New York State's power-drunk district attorneys and New York City's “special narcotics prosecutor” will inevitably peddle nickel-bags of anecdotal fear mongering to undermine the good will and desire for reform among the majority of New Yorkers. But the legislature must have the courage and will to accept its responsibility to the people, and "Just say No" to this tiny pod of 63 mostly legal dinosaurs.

Incidentally, in 2009, there are district attorney elections in Brooklyn and Manhattan -- and the voters in these respective counties can make the incumbents pay with their jobs if they wickedly wield their influence to undermine the repeal movement. The gung-ho special prosecutor's office should also have to face the voters, rather than being greased into office by the Manhattan District Attorney. Better yet, we would all be better off if this bureaucratic boondoggle of a jobs program for trust-funded Ivy League law graduates were simply abolished, and replaced with something effective and cost efficient: drug treatment centers.

Meanwhile, Anthony Williams should not have to wait any further for full repeal to realize his freedom. Justice is screaming for his immediate release. This can only mean a pardon from Governor Paterson, whose strokes of his powerful pen have come few and far between. To Paterson's shame, he, of all people should know, mean, and do, much better: As an admitted past cocaine user, he might himself have ended up consigned to a form of "state-subsidized housing" -- other than the Governor's mansion. There, but for the grace of God, might have gone our Governor, himself a man of faith.

Paterson, a bright and well-read individual, also knows of what passes for "law enforcement" in New York's communities of color. He is quite aware of what goes on in the courtrooms. I have heard this highly-literate Governor cite Tolstoy. Let me remind him of a familiar line from "War and Peace," which the wise old soldier-sage Platon utters to his fellow prisoner Pierre, during the French occupation of Moscow: "Where there are laws there are lies, where there are courts there are injustices."

The 1854 'Know Nothing" victory in Massachusetts was a watershed for freedom all across America, prompting William Lloyd Garrison's ecstatic observation that "Nothing like it could be found in the political history of the country." And it hasn't happened since, but it could now, here in New York!

This is change that we not only "believe in" but change that is possible. And we of New York could well set the stage for the Obama Era two weeks before the new President takes office:

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nekp
Posted by: nepkp on Nov 28, 2008 7:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is why the police have been referred to as "PIGS" for 40+ years. They act like NAZI's going after Jews when a person asserts their rights under California Law to self-medicate! Now I suppose they will round up all of the registered marihauna users and send them to their "re-education camps". If it is war they want, war they shall get. Just like the Nazi's of old, they will be beaten down into the dust, eventually!

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QUESTIONS:
Posted by: using on Nov 30, 2008 3:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
TWO QUESTIONS:

A. IS THERE A PROFIT TO BE MADE FROM PRISON OR PRISONERS?
b. aRE THE PRISONERS DOING A JOB (LIKE SLAVE LABOR)?

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here we go again
Posted by: kungfuma on Dec 9, 2008 7:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AGAIN Ny woman missing, registered sex offender being question.man is repeat offender. blood found in his truck.60%of americas 2.3 mill prison population are drug offenders,while only 3% prison pop is of the violent type. families,children suffering because violent sex offenders roam free while mam's knitting in jail. a big WTF . If I dont find an effective way to bring this up in my community w/o being jailed.....

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