University of Utah Law Professor Paul Cassell asks President Obama to commute sentence in Weldon Angelos Case

University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law professor Paul G. Cassell is asking President Barack Obama to commute the sentence of Weldon Angelos, a music producer who was sentenced to 55 years in prison in 2004 in connection with selling marijuana.

In a letter sent to Obama today, Cassell, a former federal judge who handed down the sentence to Angelos in Salt Lake City’s U.S. District Court, called the case “one of the most troubling that I ever faced in my five years on the federal bench.”

The case was the chief reason Cassell chose to step down from the federal bench. Now a professor, Cassell, who has published numerous law review articles on criminal justice issues, has asked Obama to grant clemency in the case.
“I write you as the judge who sentenced Weldon Angelos to a 55-year mandatory minimum prison term for non-violent drug offenses,” Cassell wrote in the opening paragraph of the letter. “In 2004 when I was forced to impose that sentence, I wrote a lengthy opinion explaining why that sentence was ‘unjust.’ United States v. Angelos, 345 F. Supp. 2d 1227, 1230 (D. Utah 2004). Indeed, at the time, I wrote that ‘to correct what appears to be an unjust sentence, the court also calls on the president — in whom our Constitution reposes the power to correct unduly harsh sentences — to commute Mr. Angelos’ sentence to something that is more in accord with just and rational punishment.’ Id. Now that Mr. Angelos has served more than 12 years in prison, I once again want to call on you to commute his sentence. I thus write in strong support of a clemency petition that he has filed.”

The letter to Obama is not the first time Cassell has sought a presidential pardon in the case of Angelos. Cassell previously implored former President George Bush to commute the sentence, calling it “unjust, cruel and irrational.”
Other calls to commute Angels’ sentence have come from a host of other people, including former Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson, former U.S. Sen. Jake Garn, Sen. Mike Lee, HBO comedian John Oliver, FBI Director Bill Sessions, California Attorney General John Van de Kamp and former Utah Chief Justice Michael Zimmerman.
The case of Angelos, whose name in the past decade has often been at the center of national public policy discussions related to mandatory minimum prison terms for non-violent drug offenders, began in 2002.
Angelos — the founder of Utah hip-hop label Extravagant Records — sold marijuana to a police informant three times in May and June 2002, each time charging $350. He was indicted in federal court on one gun possession count, three counts of marijuana distribution and two lesser charges. Prosecutors claimed Angelos was a gang member and drug dealer who had a gun strapped to his ankle during one of the drug sales to informants. Angelos denied those allegations and declined a plea bargain offered by prosecutors. The Offices of the U.S. Attorneys called the offer Angelos rejected a “huge break,” then obtained a new indictment with 20 charges that mandated a minimum 105-year sentence.
A jury convicted Angelos in 2003 of 16 counts of drug trafficking, weapons possession and money laundering. One charge was dismissed, and the jury acquitted Angelos of three charges.

Cassell, the U.S. district court judge assigned to Angelos’ case in Salt Lake City, sentenced the man to a minimum mandatory 55-year sentence: Five years on the first weapons conviction and 25 years each for the next two counts, as required by law.

Cassell outlined several reasons the sentence should be commuted in his letter to Obama.

“So what, some may say, if he spends more years in prison than might be theoretically justified? It is common wisdom that ‘if you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime,’” Cassell wrote. “The problem with this simplistic position is that it overlooks other interests that are inevitably involved in the imposition of a criminal sentence. I resigned my position as a federal judge to return to law teaching — and to work on behalf of crime victims. Of course, in some circumstances, lengthy prison sentences can help protect crime victims. But unduly long sentences can be harmful from a crime victims’ perspective. For example, crime victims expect that the penalties the court imposes will fairly reflect the harms that they have suffered. When the sentence for actual violence inflicted on a victim is dwarfed by a sentence for carrying guns to several drug deals, the implicit message to victims is that their pain and suffering counts for less than some abstract ‘war on drugs.’”

Cassell ends the letter urging Obama to “swiftly commute (Angelos’) sentence.”
To read the letter in its entirety, click here.


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