Pubdate: Sun, 19 May 2002 Source: Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 2002 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://inq.philly.com/content/inquirer/home/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Eric Slater, Los Angeles Times Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) COURTS SCRUTINIZE UNFORGIVING LAWS On May 1, the 34-year-old mother of two got perhaps the first break of her life. She was freed. "You've gotten a second chance," said Jefferson County Circuit Judge Tommy Nail. "Don't blow it." To many, Wilson had become a symbol of the high price of mandatory sentencing. And her release is the latest in a series of events challenging those laws. Intended to target major drug traffickers, many mandatory minimum laws, as they are known, more often have sent addicts, drug dealers' girlfriends, and college students peddling marijuana to prison for long terms. Now, the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear two cases, probably in the fall, challenging California's three-strikes law, the toughest of its kind in the nation. Sens. Jeff Sessions (R., Ala.), a former federal prosecutor, and Orrin G. Hatch (R., Utah) are pushing a bill that would ease mandatory sentences for those who played a minimal role in a drug transaction. Neither lawmaker is known for being easy on criminals. Louisiana, Michigan, Connecticut, North Dakota, Utah, Washington state, Iowa and Mississippi also have rolled back at least some of their mandatory-minimum statutes. They have rolled them back to prevent more cases such as Wilson's. In 1996, Wilson - a junior high school dropout - was losing all control, she told the Birmingham News in the only interview since her incarceration. The product of a troubled household, she drank too much, had become addicted to prescription painkillers following a medical problem, was deeply in debt, and had marital problems. Then, her mother died, she said. Then, the state took custody of her two children. Unable to pay a $95 electricity bill, she got a vial of a prescription morphine solution from a neighbor whose late husband had used the painkiller while undergoing cancer treatments. During a secretly taped conversation with an undercover police officer posing as a drug buyer, Wilson said she had no idea what the morphine was worth. So she offered to sell it for $150. She would keep $80 for herself, she said, and give $70 to the neighbor. The police officer replied that he only had $80 with him. No problem, Wilson said on the tape; he could pay her whenever he had the money. Wilson had no idea that the 97.8 grams of morphine solution had a street value of $10,000 - or that the confluence of circumstances would land her desperate crime under a law intended to nab Alabama's biggest drug traffickers. In March 1998, Circuit Judge J. Richmond Pearson was visibly shaken when, saying he had no choice, he sentenced Wilson to spend the rest of her life in prison. Last year, Wilson appealed. In August, the state appellate court's opinion came down. Wilson's sentence, wrote Judge Sue Bell Cobb, was "grossly disproportionate." The Alabama attorney general then appealed the case to the state Supreme Court. In April, the court agreed with the lower court's decision. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom