Pubdate: Mon, 29 Jul 2002 Source: Roanoke Times (VA) Copyright: 2002 Roanoke Times Contact: http://www.roanoke.com/roatimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/368 Author: Jen McCaffery DRUG USERS' INJURIES COULD LENGTHEN SENTENCES Should drug dealers be held responsible for what happens to their customers? That question is at the center of two heroin conspiracy cases pending in federal court. Six people have overdosed, though not fatally, as a result of one of the heroin conspiracies, federal prosecutor Donald Wolthuis has said. At least two people died as a result of a second heroin distribution case, he said. If a judge or jury determines they should be held responsible, the defendants could face a mandatory minimum prison sentence of 20 years to a potential life sentence under federal law. The cases also mark an increased use of the law, which until last year had been used in less than a handful of federal cases, said Tom Bondurant, criminal chief of the U.S. Attorney's Office. "People are getting hurt," said U.S. Attorney John Brownlee. "It's our responsibility to protect the public. When drug dealers are causing death or serious bodily harm, we're going after them." But defense attorneys around the country, while not condoning drug distribution, have raised the question of whether their clients should face the consequences for other people's actions once those people get the drugs. "You're not calling it murder, but you're treating it that way in some respects," with the potential life sentence, said Mycki Ratzan, a Miami lawyer who specializes in drug cases and is a member of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. The arguments over whether people who have made drugs available - even through legitimate channels - should be held responsible for what happens when people abuse them is also likely to come up in the case of Roanoke pain specialist Dr. Cecil Byron Knox and two of his former employees, Beverly Gale Boone and Tiffany Durham. The three are facing trial in January on charges including that Knox, with Boone and Durham's help, overprescribed drugs that either killed or seriously injured 10 of his patients. Federal prosecutors will not confirm how many deaths versus serious injuries, they argue, have resulted. ut a federal affidavit has referred to the overdose of one of Knox's former patients, Mark Wimmer. A wrongful-death lawsuit has been filed on behalf of Wimmer and another former patient who also overdosed, John Tisdale. Lawmakers - both at the state and federal level - have made it clear that they think people who distribute drugs should be held accountable if a certain level of harm befalls the person who takes the drugs. Under state law, a person can be charged with felony murder if someone is killed in the course of another felony, such as robbery. In one case in Salem, a Connecticut man, Matthew Jason Sebas, is facing two felony murder and two drug distribution charges for the fatal overdoses of two of the people he traveled with while following the rock band String Cheese Incident. Prosecutors argued that Sebas supplied Andrew Briggs and Amanda Parks the morphine that led to their overdoses. And in the last General Assembly session, Del. Morgan Griffith, R-Salem, sponsored legislation that took effect July 1. The law says parents of juveniles can sue adults who sold or gave drugs to their children for the cost of their treatment and rehabilitation, and also recover damages for emotional pain and suffering. Griffith conceded he didn't know how often the law would be used, because drug dealers don't tend to have a lot of assets. If they do, the assets were often acquired illegally and are seized by law enforcement. The legislation exempts health care practitioners who prescribe medication "in good faith." Meanwhile, federal drug laws mandate a sentence of at least 20 years for people who distribute drugs that result in death or serious injury, though the amount of drug required to qualify for the law varies. Wolthuis said the increasing abuse of opiates such as heroin, methadone and OxyContin - which, when abused, are more likely to result in death than other drugs - is the reason the death and serious injury charge is coming up in more federal cases locally. Heroin is also much purer than it used to be, Wolthuis said, and thus more potent. Fifteen years ago, the heroin mixtures that law enforcement officials tested were about 6 percent to 7 percent pure, Wolthuis said. The heroin from the two pending conspiracy cases tested from about 85 percent to 90 percent pure, he said. The law went on the books in the mid-1980s as part of a number of laws Congress passed to combat drugs. Bondurant was one of the prosecutors in the first case involving the death or serious injury law in the Western District. William S. "Billy" Davis, a Pittsylvania County tobacco farmer and drug dealer, was convicted under the law in 1989 in the cocaine overdose of 19-year-old Kimberly Dane Kirk. He was sentenced to 24 years in prison, which Davis, then 50, likened to a death sentence. He is serving his time in Kentucky, according to the Bureau of Prisons, with a release date of 2013. Serious bodily injury is defined under federal law as causing a substantial risk of death, physical disfigurement, or loss of mental or physical functioning. Ratzan argued that the definition is "very, very broad. It leaves some great interpretation and deference to the courts." The Miami lawyer said she has seen cases in Florida in which judges have decided that a permanent facial scar or a broken limb qualifies as serious injury. "How far does the connection go?" Ratzan asked. "I don't know where it ends. You have to rely on the integrity of the prosecutors to use it in only the most egregious cases." What qualifies as serious injury is part of what U.S. District Judge James Turk will decide at the Sept. 30 bench trial of seven defendants who pleaded guilty last week to conspiracy with intent to distribute more than 100 grams of heroin . Wolthuis has said he is not alleging that the heroin distribution in that case led to any overdose deaths. Robert William Perry, 28; Brian Anthony Loy, 30; Shawn Marie McCarty, 25; Steven Edward Songer, 24, all of Roanoke; David Anthony Benson, 26, of Blue Ridge; Jackie Lewis Persiani, 27, of Goodview; and Nicholas Weir, 23, of Philadelphia, all face a mandatory minimum sentence of five years before the serious injury aspect - which their attorneys have reserved the right to argue - has even been decided. In what Wolthuis said is a related heroin conspiracy case of two other Philadelphia men, Javier "Angel" Cruz, 22, and Issac Ramos, 22, and Vincent Jennell Jr., 35, of Salem, the federal prosecutor will argue that the conspiracy led to at least two fatal overdoses. Cruz, who is not the same Javier Cruz who figured in federal drug investigations during the 1990s, and Jennell have pleaded not guilty; their trial is set for Aug. 15. Ramos is still at large. Roanoke attorney David Damico, who is representing Benson in the first conspiracy case, said one of the arguments he anticipated would be raised was whether the heroin that the conspirators admittedly distributed was the only factor in the overdoses. "Whatever happened to some of these folks was not fatal, and actually could have been influenced by other factors," Damico said. He does not dispute that the overdoses occurred, but said some of the people who overdosed may have mixed the heroin with other drugs or alcohol. Roanoke attorney Deborah Caldwell-Bono, who is representing Weir, said she is troubled by what she sees as the law getting away from people taking responsibility for their own actions. "If they hurt themselves taking heroin, why should you go back and hold the other person responsible?" Caldwell-Bono asked. Following that logic, she questioned, why isn't the state held responsible for selling alcohol to someone who then drives while drunk and kills another person? Damico also said he would question whether every member of the conspiracy should be held responsible if another person's distribution led to an overdose. Roanoke attorney Chris Kowalczuk, who is representing Jennell, declined to comment on that case, but said generally that conspiracy laws are "very far-reaching." "There are times when seemingly unconnected people get brought together by these conspiracy counts in a way they never imagined." Kowalczuk added that judges generally take into account the scope of the role a defendant has played in a conspiracy when they get sentenced and mete out punishment appropriate for their level of involvement. The issue of death or serious bodily injury can also be revisited at sentencing, however, and could result in more prison time under federal guidelines. But the prosecution may also make motions for the sentences of the convicted to be reduced further if they have cooperated with the prosecution. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom