Source: Philadelphia Daily News Contact: Pubdate: 20 Nov 1997 Website: http://www.phillynews.com SMALLTIME DEALER GETS LIFE TERM by Jim Smith, Daily News Staff Writer Another gopher prosecutors say middleman in the Philadelphia drug trade was jailed this week for life without chance of parole. U.S. District Judge Charles R. Weiner had no option. A life sentence was mandatory because prosecutors declined to seek even the smallest measure of leniency for the defendant, David Padilla, 30, formerly of Franklin Street near Cumberland. Padilla was arrested a year ago for driving a van that contained 12 kilograms of cocaine, worth about $120,000. The father of two had two prior federal convictions for drugselling. The two earlier drug busts marked him as a "career offender." "No one can overstate the ruinous impact of drugs on this community," U.S. Attorney Michael R. Stiles said yesterday, explaining why he declined to show any mercy. "There are very stiff federal sentences that try to tell . . . everyone that if you make a mistake three times, you may end up spending the rest of your life in jail," the area's chief lawman added. Padilla's defense attorney disagreed. "It's an unfortunate case," said Hope C. Lefeber. She insisted there were ample grounds for some leniency. She said her client held a job in a garage, supported his wife and two young children, had coached Little League, was otherwise active in his community, attended church regularly and got involved in parentteacher meetings. Padilla was one of two men arrested by FBI agents and Pennsylvania State Police who, acting on an informant's tip, had stopped the van on Nov. 12, 1996, following a hotel stakeout and highspeed chase. Codefendant Jose Cruz, the passenger in the van, testified at Padilla's trial in April that he and Padilla each expected to make $1,500 for picking up the cocaine at the Embassy Suites Hotel near Philadelphia International Airport and delivering it to a local drug dealer named Emilio, who had hired them. Emilio, whose full name is known to authorities, is now considered a fugitive, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Ewald Zittlau, the case prosecutor. More than 55 Philadelphia drug traffickers, many of them smalltime dealers like Padilla, have been jailed for life by federal judges since the mid1980s, court records show.