Pubdate: Sun, 03 Dec 2000 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2000 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: 401 N. Wabash, Chicago IL 60611 Feedback: http://www.suntimes.com/geninfo/feedback.html Website: http://www.suntimes.com/ Author: Steve Warmbir SMUGGLER'S TURNAROUND BRINGS BREAK FROM JUDGE Shirley Wood went from smuggling heroin in the soles of her shoes to starting an after-school program to keep kids off drugs. Her unusual transformation earned her an equally unusual sentencing break in federal court in Chicago, when a judge ignored a plea deal that Wood had agreed to and decided that because she so totally turned her life around, she didn't deserve to go to prison. "There comes a point where justice and punishment become cruelty," U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman said Friday as he sentenced Wood instead to the time she already had served in prison--five days--plus six months of home confinement during which she will be allowed to go to work. "I'm not going to be part of that cruelty." Wood, 28, who lives in Los Angeles but was arrested in Chicago, had pleaded guilty to the drug crime in 1996. Her sentencing had been delayed for a few years as she and her attorneys grappled with how to avoid her deportation to her home country, Iran, where she could face death. Under her deal with prosecutors, Wood was to have been sentenced to about 30 months in prison. Instead, and over a prosecutor's objection, Gettleman decided that putting Wood in prison would hurt the greater Los Angeles community, whose children are benefitting from Wood's program, called K.I.D.S.--short for Keeping It Drug Safe. The judge said he was skeptical of defendants who start doing good deeds only after they're arrested. But Wood is different, Gettleman said. Her program is expected to serve several thousand schoolchildren in the coming year. "It's a real organization, helping kids not make the mistake she made," the judge said. He also requested that immigration officials not deport her to Iran. "The thought of sending this young woman to Iran gives me the shivers," Gettleman said. But that was only a suggestion; the judge doesn't have the power to order that. The woman's attorneys said they would fight any deportation effort. Wood admitted smuggling more than 800 grams of heroin with a friend on a return trip from Amsterdam in 1995. She was arrested at O'Hare Airport. Her attorney, James D. Henderson, argued that while Wood knew what she was doing was wrong, she was naive about drugs and had been threatened with violence if she tried to back out. After she was caught, she read about the dangers of drugs and became an "anti-drug zealot," her attorney said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart