Pubdate: Sun, 21 Nov 2004 Source: Hattiesburg American (MS) Copyright: 2004 Hattiesburg American Contact: http://www.hattiesburgamerican.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1646 DRUG ABUSE ISN'T A CRIME WITHOUT VICTIMS Suspects in two brutal Pine Belt crime cases were brought to justice in the past week, resulting in lengthy sentences behind bars. The first involved an April 12 home invasion in Rawls Springs in which homeowner Steven Spencer was shot five times in front of his family. He still has three of the bullets lodged in his body. On Monday, Forrest County Circuit Judge Bob Helfrich sentenced teenagers Channin Terrell Wilson and Domiano Ratcliff to 60 years each on armed robbery and aggravated assault charges. Ten years of the sentences were suspended. Two other suspects, Mark Steven Turner and Jessie Arneel Wilson, were also involved in the incident but cut deals with the district attorney's office. Jessie Wilson got a 20-year sentence with 10 years suspended; Turner was dealt a 10-year sentence with three years suspended. Wilson and Ratcliff, who pleaded guilty to the charges, apparently just picked the Spencer home at random. They got away with $60 in cash. On Friday, Helfrich sentenced Cedric Hands for his role in a May 13 armed robbery and kidnapping of a Dandy Dan's Amoco station clerk and firing on three police officers. Hands, who pleaded guilty to the crimes earlier this month, will likely have to serve 40 years in prison. While there is no apparent connection between the two incidents, there was at least one common thread. In both incidents, the defendants told Helfrich they were on drugs when they committed the crimes. To his credit Helfrich cut the defendants no slack when they blamed their actions on drugs. "By your actions you have terrified a family," Helfrich told the defendants in the home invasion. "Drug abuse is no excuse." On Friday Hands told Helfrich that he was high on drugs when he committed his crime. He also apologized to store clerk Dana Davenport. "That counts in your favor," Helfrich told Hands. "Drug use does not count in your favor." If there is anyone who thinks that drug abuse is a victimless crime, they should look at those two cases for refuting evidence. They can look at how illegal drugs have changed the lives of the Spencers and Davenport, who still have nightmares about their experiences. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin