Pubdate: Wed, 13 Apr 2005 Source: Virginian-Pilot (VA) Copyright: 2005, The Virginian-Pilot Contact: http://www.pilotonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/483 Author: John Hopkins Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) MAN GETS 20 YEARS IN PRISON ON DRUG CHARGES CHESAPEAKE -- A 36-year-old San Diego man was sentenced to 20 years in prison Tuesday for transporting drugs by commercial airline into Chesapeake. Police seized 12.9 pounds of marijuana and $203,108 when they arrested Darrell D. Bell and an accomplice at a Greenbrier extended-stay hotel in late 2003. Bell told police he had transported 220 pounds of marijuana and another 108 pounds on other occasions. "I'd just like to apologize to the court and the people of Virginia for the mistake I've made," said Bell, a father of three and former employee at an elementary school in San Diego. Circuit Judge V. Thomas Forehand Jr. sentenced Bell on charges of transporting drugs into the commonwealth, possession of marijuana with the intent to distribute, possession of a firearm with drugs and conspiracy. His accomplice, Kevin Allen Key, 36, of Las Vegas, is scheduled to be sentenced June 3. The two men flew into Hampton Roads from San Diego, rented two rooms at the Sun Suites of Chesapeake at 1520 Crossways Blvd., and sold drugs in pound quantities, according to Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Kenneth A. Phillips, who prosecuted both cases. They kept the drugs in one room and the money in another. "He stated that he pushed in the bad neighborhoods," Phillips said. "He stated that he sold nothing smaller than a pound." Although airport security was increased after Sept. 11, 2001, Bell admitted to police that they transported the drugs by air, according to the prosecution. Jo Anne Spencer, Bell's attorney, said her client wasn't the leader of the drug scheme. She would have argued at trial that her client actually purchased the drugs here, she said. He failed to make money during his first trip to Chesapeake, she said in arguing for a lighter sentence. Bell had lived an exemplary life before the crime, Spencer said. "We're talking about marijuana," Spencer told the judge. "We're not talking about cocaine or heroin. We're not talking about any hard-core, addictive drugs." Forehand called the crime a "rather elaborate and sophisticated criminal enterprise," and one of the biggest of its kind he's seen. He dismissed the notion that marijuana is a lesser drug. "It's still illegal," Forehand said. "It's still deemed by many experts as harmful. ... " Bell was a "noon-duty assistant" at Knox Elementary in San Diego, a position that required him to organize and oversee children at lunch and recreation, said Steven Baratte, a school spokesman. Bell entered a conditional guilty plea in February, a move that will allow him to appeal an earlier court ruling by another judge concerning the suppression of evidence in his case. His accomplice, Key, was convicted by a jury in January of conspiracy and possession with the intent to distribute marijuana. The jury recommended a sentence of 31 years in prison for Key. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom