Pubdate: Sat, 13 Apr 2002 Source: Birmingham News, The (AL) Copyright: 2002 The Birmingham News Contact: http://www.al.com/birminghamnews/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45 Author: Stan Bailey COURT BACKS NEW DRUG CASE EDICT MONTGOMERY - A Birmingham woman sentenced to life without parole for the sale of 3.5 ounces of a liquid morphine mixture to an undercover police officer will be resentenced as a result of a decision Friday by the Alabama Supreme Court. The justices decided without comment to let stand a state Court of Criminal Appeals ruling, which held that the state's "Drug Barons" law is unconstitutional and inflicts cruel and unusual punishment as it was applied to the woman, Theresa Wilson. The Drug Barons law bases sentencing on the amount of drugs involved rather than the number of offenses of the defendant. This was Wilson's only drug conviction. "This is an outstanding decision," said Bill Bowen, who along with his law partner, Mark White, represented Wilson without charge. Wilson, who is serving time at Tutwiler Prison for Women on her first drug offense, was addicted to prescription drugs and was arrested after she sold drugs that had been prescribed for a neighbor in East Lake who died of cancer. "Theresa Wilson received this life without parole sentence because she was poor and addicted to drugs," White said Friday. "If she had been rich, powerful or important, she would have received treatment for her problem rather than the unprecedented punishment she received." White said the 1986 law was aimed at real drug barons, who routinely are allowed to cut plea bargains with prosecutors for dramatically reduced sentences. Bowen said Friday's decision means Wilson will come before Jefferson County Circuit Judge Tommy Nail for resentencing. She was sentenced in the original case in 1998. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth