Leopoldo Hernandez-Miranda ~ Life for Pot
LEOPOLDO HERNANDEZ-MIRANDA # 81659-071
FMC BUTNER
FEDERAL MEDICAL CENTER
P.O. BOX 1600
BUTNER, NC 27509
LEOPOLDO HERNANDEZ-MIRANDA
REGISTER NUMBER: 81659-071
DOB: 9/30/1938
AGE: 79
RACE: WHITE
SEX: MALE
LOCATED AT: Butner FMC
RELEASE DATE: LIFE
Words from Leopoldo Hernandez-Miranda ~ Click here
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US vs Hernandez-Miranda
Leo doesn't speak, read, or write any English.
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Andy Cox ~ Life for Pot
ANDY COX # 89487-020
USP POLLOCK
U.S. PENITENTIARY
P.O. BOX 2099
POLLOCK, LA 71467
ANDY COX
REGISTER NUMBER: 89487-020
DOB: 7/13/1964
AGE: 54
RACE: WHITE
SEX: MALE
LOCATED AT: Pollock USP
RELEASE DATE: LIFE
Words from Andy Cox ~ Click here
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For more information about a 2255 hearing
Former Fugitive Marijuana Grower Sentenced to Life in Prison
Andy says-
Good to hear from you, was wondering what had happen to you, but have got kind of used to people dropping out of sight, I know on the outside you all have a life moving along and were just stuck with the same day after day thing. I do hope all is well. was just letting you know that I got good news on the 2255, don't need any help or anything, you could let anyone in the Atlanta area know there will be a hearing on a grow case about plants verse seedlings coming up august 26 at the federal building in Gainesville Georgia at ten am, Andrew Cox v. United States... Take Care, if there is anything I can do to Help you please let Me know.............. always Andrew.
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Travis Bourda ~ Life to 20 years for Marijuana
TRAVIS BOURDA # 387150
LA STATE PRISON
17544 TUNICA TRACE
ANGOLA, LA 70712
TRAVIS BOURDA
REGISTER NUMBER: 387150
DOB: 01/06/1980
AGE: 36
RACE: AFRICAN AMERICAN
SEX: MALE
LOCATED AT: LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
RELEASE DATE: 20 YEARS
Words from Travis Bourda ~ Click here
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Veronica Zepeda ~
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Sentenced reduced from Life to 20 years.
Travis Bourda is serving LWOP for possession of 130 grams (less than 5 ounces) of weeds with intent to distribute.
Travis Bourda is serving LWOP for possession of 130 grams of marijuana with intent to distribute. Although no marijuana was found in his possession, the 29-year-old oil rigger was convicted at trial in October 2009. Bourda says he was represented by court-appointed counsel who filed no motions, failed to investigate, and made no objections at trial. The trial judge initially sentenced Bourda to eight years as a habitual offender because of his prior convictions for carnal knowledge of a juvenile a decade earlier when he was 19, and distribution of marijuana. After the prosecutor charged him as a third-strike habitual offender, the judge resentenced Bourda to 14 years and stated on the record that the life sentence sought by the prosecutor would be unconstitutionally excessive:I believe a life sentence under the circumstances in these cases, a drug case, a carnal knowledge case, and another drug case would be an unconstitutional sentence. I believe that fourteen years is more than enough considering the underlying charge was possession with intent to distribute marijuana, and that the amount of marijuana involved was not significant. The prosecutor appealed the 14-year-sentence as illegally lenient, and the appellate court agreed and sentenced Bourda to life without parole. Bourda, who calls himself “the most miserable person there is,” is a diagnosed schizophrenic who says he has received intermittent mental health care since he was 12. He talks with his mother and sister twice a week and has taken educational, religious, substance abuse, welding, and anger management classes in prison. Of his sentence, Bourda says, “Life without parole means you never going home, you never have a chance to show society you have truly change[d] and can be a productive member of society.” He adds, “It is a sense of hopelessness. Every day you wonder if you are ever going to make it home to your family and children.”
The judge said, “I believe a life sentence under the circumstances would be an unconstitutional sentence considering the charge was possession with intent to distribute marijuana, and that the amount of marijuana involved was not significant.”
Travis Bourda is serving LWOP for possession of 130 grams of marijuana with intent to distribute. Although no marijuana was found in his possession, the 29-year-old oil rigger was convicted at trial in October 2009. Bourda says he was represented by court-appointed counsel who filed no motions, failed to investigate, and made no objections at trial. The trial judge initially sentenced Bourda to eight years as a habitual offender because of his prior convictions for carnal knowledge of a juvenile a decade earlier when he was 19, and distribution of marijuana. After the prosecutor charged him as a third-strike habitual offender, the judge resentenced Bourda to 14 years and stated on the record that the life sentence sought by the prosecutor would be unconstitutionally excessive:I believe a life sentence under the circumstances in these cases, a drug case, a carnal knowledge case, and another drug case would be an unconstitutional sentence…. I believe that fourteen years is more than enough considering the underlying charge was possession with intent to distribute marijuana, and that the amount of marijuana involved was not significant. The prosecutor appealed the 14-year-sentence as illegally lenient, and the appellate court agreed and sentenced Bourda to life without parole. Bourda, who calls himself “the most miserable person there is,” is a diagnosed schizophrenic who says he has received intermittent mental health care since he was 12. He talks with his mother and sister twice a week and has taken educational, religious, substance abuse, welding, and anger management classes in prison. Of his sentence, Bourda says, “Life without parole means you never going home, you never have a chance to show society you have truly changed and can be a productive member of society.”1163 He adds, “It is a sense of hopelessness. Every day you wonder if you are ever going to make it home to your family and children.”
Travis last saw his twin's when they were three months old. Angel Taylor Bourda Aaliyah Taylor Bourda need their Dad home.
Claude Duboc ~ Life for Pot
CLAUDE LOUIS DUBOC # 01434-112
USP TUCSON
U.S. PENITENTIARY
P.O. BOX 24550
TUCSON, AZ 85734
CLAUDE LOUIS DUBOC
REGISTER NUMBER: 01434-112
DOB: 6/27/1942
AGE: 75
RACE: WHITE
SEX: MALE
LOCATED AT: Tucson USP
RELEASE DATE: LIFE
Words from Claude Duboc ~ Click here
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Claude court case US vs. Claude
Free Claude du Boc!
FREE CLAUDE DUBOC
Claude is a French National Citizen. He is serving LWOP because of cannabis. That is LIFE for pot. He really want to go home, to France. He wants to see his family. Write him today and find out how you can help.
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Jeff Mizanskey ~ Released
Jeff has been released. Welcome home.
JEFF MIZANSKEY
Po BOX 1872
SEDALIA, MO 65302
JEFF MIZANSKEY
REGISTER NUMBER: 521900
DOB: 4/25/1953
RACE: WHITE
SEX: MALE
RELEASED ON: 9/1/2015
Words from Jeff Mizanskey
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Missouri Governor Jay Nixon
Chriz Mizanskey
VIDEO: Meet Jeff Mizanskey, Missouri's Only Inmate Sentenced to Death in Prison for Pot
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Information for Family and Friends
Daniel Nunez ~ Life for Pot
DANIEL NUNEZ # 21339-017
FDC HOUSTON
FEDERAL DETENTION CENTER
P.O. BOX 526255
HOUSTON, TX 77052
DANIEL NUNEZ
REGISTER NUMBER: 21339-017
DOB: need
AGE: 40
RACE: WHITE
SEX: MALE
LOCATED AT: Houston FDC
RELEASE DATE: LIFE
Words from Daniel Nunez ~ Click here
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South Texas drug trafficker sentenced to life in prison
Daniel Nunez, 38, of Hidalgo, Texas, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Randy Crane to life in prison. Crane noted that this was a significant drug trafficking conspiracy over a long period of time. Nunez pleaded guilty to the following drug trafficking charges Nov. 27, 2012: conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute more than 1,000 kilograms of marijuana, and conspiracy to transport and attempt to transport monetary instruments to Mexico to promote drug trafficking.
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Anthony Kelly ~ Life for Pot
ANTHONY KELLY # 324966
CAMP D RAVEN 3/L #9
LOUISIANA STATE PENITENTIARY
17544 TUNICA TRACE
ANGOLA, LA 70712
ANTHONY KELLY
REGISTER NUMBER: 324966
DOB: 11/2/1973
AGE: 42
RACE: BLACK
SEX: MALE
LOCATE AT: LOUISIANA STATE PENITENTIARY
RELEASE DATE: LIFE
Words from Anthony Kelly ~ Click here
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Anthony Kelly ~ Legal Documents
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Anthony Kelly was sentenced to LWOP for possession of 32 grams of marijuana with intent to distribute in 1999, at age 25. After a confidential informant made a controlled purchase of $20 worth of marijuana from Gwen, a Kelly family neighbor, Kenner Police Department officers used a battering ram to forcibly enter and search her house, which was located across the street from the apartment where Kelly’s mother and brother lived. At Gwen’s house, police found a clear plastic bag containing 21 small nickel bags of marijuana in the toilet, as well as three partially smoked hand-rolled marijuana cigarettes in an ashtray. An additional 21 small bags of marijuana and a bag of loose marijuana were found in Gwen’s purse.
According to Kelly, at the time of the police search, he and his brother were at Gwen’s house, helping bring in groceries after driving her to the grocery store. Police arrested Gwen, her son, Kelly, and his two brothers. At trial, the lead detective claimed that she found Kelly and the neighbor’s son trying to flush the marijuana baggies down the toilet. Kelly insists this is untrue, and both Gwen and her son testified that the detective found the marijuana after everyone had been handcuffed and brought to the living room. Gwen testified that the marijuana was hers, that she packaged the marijuana herself with no help from Kelly, and that Kelly did not know she was selling marijuana. Kelly was convicted, despite this testimony, by 10 out of 12 jurors.
The lead police detective, a primary witness against Kelly, was later convicted of evidence tampering and malfeasance in office, and she was accused of taking drugs from the evidence room for her own use. Kelly was originally sentenced to 15 years but was re-sentenced to a mandatory LWOP sentence as a third-strike felony offender based on two prior convictions, one for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in 1995, when he was 21, and the other for simple possession of cocaine in 1993, when he was 19. Kelly had pleaded guilty to both charges and says he was never told that these convictions could be used to enhance a future felony sentence. He says that his sentence “feels like being buried alive.” “Do I deserve to spend the rest of my life behind bars because I was in possession of 21 five-dollar bags of marijuana?” he asks. “This is my life story, I just want someone to hear a changed man cry. Anthony Kelly is serving Life for POT… “It seems like it would get easier, but instead it gets harder every day” says Anthony Kelly. At age 25 Kelley was sentenced to die in prison for possession of 32 grams of marijuana with intent to distribute.
After a confidential informant made a controlled purchase of $20 worth of marijuana from Ms. Gwen, a neighbor, police officers used a battering ram to forcibly enter and search her house. There they found a clear plastic bag containing 21 small nickel bags of marijuana in the toilet, as well as three partially smoked hand-rolled marijuana cigarettes in an ashtray. An additional 21 small bags of marijuana and a bag of loose marijuana were found in Ms. Gwen‘s purse. According to Mr. Kelly, at the time of the police search, he and his brother were at Ms. Gwen‘s house, helping bring in groceries after driving her to the grocery store.
Police arrested Ms. Gwen, her son, Mr. Kelly, and his two brothers. At trial, the lead detective claimed that she found Mr. Kelly trying to flush the marijuana baggies down the toilet. Mr. Kelly insists this is untrue, and both Gwen and her son testified that the detective found the marijuana after everyone had been handcuffed and brought to the living room. Ms. Gwen testified that the marijuana was hers and that Mr. Kelly did not know she
was selling marijuana. Mr. Kelly was convicted, despite this testimony, by 10 out of 12 jurors. The lead police detective, a primary witness against Mr. Kelly, was later convicted of evidence tampering and malfeasance in office, and she was accused of taking drugs from the evidence room for her own use.
Mr. Kelly was originally sentenced to 15 years but was re sentenced to a mandatory LWOP sentence as a third strike felony offender based on two prior convictions, one for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in 1995, when he was 21, and the other for simple possession of cocaine in 1993, when he was 19. Mr. Kelly had pleaded guilty to both charges and says he was never told that these convictions could be used to enhance a
future felony sentence. He says that his sentence ―feels like being buried alive.
Mr. Kelly, now 39, has served 13 years in prison. He says of prison, ―It seems like it would get easier, but instead it gets harder every day. Mr. Kelly, who completed the ninth grade prior to his incarceration but was a special education student at a fifth-grade level, , is currently studying for his GED.. He has taken faith based spiritual classes and courses in drug addiction and recovery and says that he has found God while in prison.
When Mr. Kelly was arrested, his girlfriend was pregnant with his first child. His daughter is now 12 years old, and he says it is difficult being away from her. ―She is my world, he says. ―I always sit and think about my daughter at night and wonder how did I fall short at providing for her. His father and grandmother have died since he has been incarcerated, and his 73-year-old mother, with whom he is close, has cancer.
Anthony Kelly was sentenced to LWOP for possession of 32 grams of weeds with intent to distribute in 1999, at age 25. Kelly was originally sentenced to 15 years but was resentenced to a mandatory LWOP sentence as a third-strike felony offender based on two prior convictions, one for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in 1995, when he was 21, and the other for simple possession of cocaine in 1993, when he was 19./
Cornell Hood ~ Life for Pot
CORNELL HOOD # 492882 DORM H
DIXON CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTE
PO BOX 788
JACKSON LA, 70748
CORNELL HOOD
REGISTER NUMBER: 492882 DORM E
DOB: 05/30/1975
AGE: 41
RACE: AFRICAN AMERICAN
SEX: MALE
LOCATED AT: DIXON CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTE
RELEASE DATE: LIFE
Words from Cornell Hood ~ Click here
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Inmate Search ~ VineLinks
in February 2011, 35 year-old Cornell Hood II was sentenced to die in prison for attempting to possess marijuana with intent to distribute.
Prosecutors charged that two probation officers performing a warrantless “residence check” found less than two pounds of marijuana in the house Cornell shared with his mother and young son near Slidell, in the St. Tammany Parish of Louisiana. Hood’s trial lasted only one day. Although the conviction would ordinarily carry a sentence of no more than 15 years, Hood was sentenced to life without parole under Louisiana’s habitual offender law because he had two prior convictions for possession of marijuana with intent to sell and one conviction for distribution of marijuana.
Hood, who is Black, had never before served time in prison, as he had received a five-year suspended sentence and five years’ probation for each of his prior convictions; he had been convicted of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and distribution of marijuana on December 18, 2009, and he had pleaded guilty to possession of marijuana with intent to distribute five years earlier in February 2005. Hood’s sentence was later vacated after the state agreed to strike his two December 2009 predicate convictions, and he was re-sentenced to 25 years in prison.
Fate Winslow ~ Life for Pot
FATE WINSLOW # 112270
LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
P.O. BOX 94304
BATON ROUGE, LA 70804-9304
REGISTER NUMBER: 112270
DOB: 05/18/1967
AGE: 48
RACE: AFRICAN AMERICAN
SEX: MALE
LOCATED AT:LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
RELEASE DATE: LIFE
Words from Fate Winslow ~ Click here
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Life in Prison for Selling $20 of Weed
Fate Vincent Winslow was homeless when he acted as a go-between in the sale of two small bags of marijuana, worth $10 in total, to an undercover police officer. Police did not arrest the white seller, even though they witnessed the entire transaction and found the marked bill used to make the controlled drug buy in his pocket. Winslow, who is Black, was sentenced to mandatory life without parole under Louisiana’s four-strikes law based on prior convictions for simple (unarmed) burglaries committed 14 and 24 years earlier and a nearly decade-old conviction for possession of cocaine.
Terrance Mosley ~ Life for Pot
TERRANCE MOSLEY # 364080
LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
P.O. BOX 94304
BATON ROUGE, LA 70804-9304
TERRANCE MOSLEY
REGISTER NUMBER: 364080
DOB: 08/09/1977
AGE: 39
RACE: AFRICAN AMERICAN
SEX: MALE
LOCATED AT: LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
RELEASE DATE: LIFE
Words from Terrance Mosley ~ Click here
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Inmate Search ~ VineLinks
Terrance Mosley is doing life for POT. Terrance was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. Mosley, a former special education student who has an eighth grade education, had two priors from his teen years related to drugs.
Terrance L. Mosley was sentenced to LWOP for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.
In August 2008, he was seated in the passenger seat of a parked car when a police officer searched the car, allegedly because it had duplicate license plates and was parked on the street, facing traffic. The officer found two bags of marijuana in the car that totaled 867 grams, or about two pounds. Mr. Mosley says he was trying to get a ride and did not know the marijuana was in the car, which he adamantly insists did not belong to him. The driver of the car received probation in exchange for pleading guilty and did not serve any time.
Mr. Mosley was first sentenced to 25 years in prison, but was subsequently sentenced to life without parole as a third-strike offender. To adjudicate Mosley a habitual offender, the judge used a 12-year-old conviction for a nonviolent drug crime he had committed as a juvenile. Mosley, a former special education student who has an eighth-grade education, had only two prior convictions: possession of cocaine with intent to distribute when he was age 17 and distribution of cocaine when he was 18. Mosley has served five years of his LWOP sentence and says that he feels ―dead and ―lost in the system.
Calling his sentence ―pure hell, he says that it is ―cruel and unusual punishment to think you will never be free before you die. His fiancée continues to support him and visits him regularly. The father of five children, 36-year-old Mosley says, ―I‘d like to have my freedom back and be the best in society possible and father for my children.