Pubdate: Tue, 27 Sep 2005 Source: North Platte Telegraph, The (NE) Copyright: 2005 North Platte Telegraph Contact: http://www.nptelegraph.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1458 Author: Kathleen Mulcahy HILL SENTENCED TO 180 DAYS IN JAIL Former mobster Henry Hill was sentenced Monday to 180 days in the Lincoln County Jail. Hill, 62, was found guilty Aug. 8 of attempted possession of methamphetamine. Hill was expected to receive probation, but when he reported to the District 9 probation office drunk, probation was no longer an option. Lincoln County District Court Judge Donald Rowlands said, "You have a long record beginning in 1965. You checked out of treatment early and unfortunately I can see no way of sentencing you to probation." Rowlands sentenced him to 180 days in jail, but gave him credit for 34 days. Hill was originally charged with possession of methamphetamine and possession of cocaine. In August 2004, local airport security guards searched bags belonging to Hill. Inside the bag they found tubes containing what later tested positive for meth and cocaine. Hill was arrested on Jan. 4 on a warrant. The charges were reduced to attempted possession of methamphetamine. Lincoln County Attorney Jeff Meyer said the reason the charges were reduced was because, "The police officer who had seized the drugs has since moved to Texas, making prosecuting this case difficult." A requirement of Hill's release on bond was that he was to abstain from the use of alcohol and non-prescribed drugs. But when Hill reported to the probation office Aug. 19 he recorded a blood alcohol content of .343. Hill was arrested on Aug. 24 on a bond revocation warrant. Prior to being arrested, Hill was allegedly involved in a hit and run accident Aug. 23 on Dewey Street. North Platte Police Officer John Stadler arrested Hill for leaving the scene of an accident, driving under a suspended license and the warrant. When Stadler went to arrest Hill, he reportedly found him passed out on a table in the back room of the Firefly Restaurant, where he works. Hill was extremely intoxicated, to the point that Lincoln County Jail officials asked that a physician check him before being booked, Stadler said. Hill was a gangster with a mob crime family in New York. He ultimately testified against fellow gang members, served time in prison, and entered the Federal Witness Protection Program. Hill was the subject of Martin Scorsese's film, "GoodFellas." - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman