News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Pain Patient Hopes for Clemency Today |
Title: | US FL: Pain Patient Hopes for Clemency Today |
Published On: | 2007-09-20 |
Source: | St. Petersburg Times (FL) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-16 17:35:50 |
PAIN PATIENT HOPES FOR CLEMENCY TODAY
The Governor and Cabinet Will Hear the Story of the Man With 700 Pills.
Richard Paey says he is not a drug trafficker. He needs drugs for
chronic, debilitating pain.
But in 2004 he was convicted of illegally obtaining drugs, after
being charged under laws designed to stop trafficking.
He has pleaded his case to anyone who would listen: jurors and
appellate judges, 60 Minutes and the New York Times.
It has gotten him a lot of sympathy, a lot of attention, but so far
it hasn't gotten him out of prison. It's 22 years and counting on a
25-year sentence.
Today, Gov. Charlie Crist and the three members of the Florida
Cabinet will hear Paey's case.
Clemency is Paey's last, best shot at freedom for years to come - and
attorney John Flannery II could get just five minutes to make the
case for his client.
"This not a drug trafficking case," Flannery said. "This is a pain
treatment case."
That is the heart of the plea Flannery and Paey's family will make
today in Tallahassee.
A 1985 car crash, botched back surgery and multiple sclerosis left
Paey in need of painkillers and a wheelchair. But in 1997 he was
arrested, accused of illegally possessing and trafficking in 700
pills obtained with fraudulent prescriptions. Authorities believed he
had to be selling, not using, that many pills.
Paey's supporters still contest every bit of the state's case. They
hope the governor and cabinet will commute his sentence to time
served and throw out a $500,000 fine.
In August the governor's office announced that Paey, a 48-year-old
Hudson father of three, was granted a waiver allowing his case to be
heard today.
Usually petitioners must wait until they have served a third of their
sentences before they can ask for clemency.
Flannery and Paey's family were supposed to have just five minutes at
the waiver hearing, too, but instead were allowed to speak for more
than an hour.
The lawyer doesn't know if he'll get more than five minutes this
time. Regardless, his argument will be a succinct one: Criminal drug
laws are inadequate to deal with the medical problem of pain management.
"All of us have a ... concern that controlled substances are
addictive," Flannery said. "But we forget the flip side of that ...
there are people who need treatment and for them these medications
are a miracle.
"Without these medications their life is a living hell."
It takes three out of four votes to grant clemency. If the clemency
board - the governor and Cabinet - turn Paey down, he'll have to wait
more than four years to apply again.
To impress the clemency board, Paey gave up his appeal to the U.S.
Supreme Court.
The Governor and Cabinet Will Hear the Story of the Man With 700 Pills.
Richard Paey says he is not a drug trafficker. He needs drugs for
chronic, debilitating pain.
But in 2004 he was convicted of illegally obtaining drugs, after
being charged under laws designed to stop trafficking.
He has pleaded his case to anyone who would listen: jurors and
appellate judges, 60 Minutes and the New York Times.
It has gotten him a lot of sympathy, a lot of attention, but so far
it hasn't gotten him out of prison. It's 22 years and counting on a
25-year sentence.
Today, Gov. Charlie Crist and the three members of the Florida
Cabinet will hear Paey's case.
Clemency is Paey's last, best shot at freedom for years to come - and
attorney John Flannery II could get just five minutes to make the
case for his client.
"This not a drug trafficking case," Flannery said. "This is a pain
treatment case."
That is the heart of the plea Flannery and Paey's family will make
today in Tallahassee.
A 1985 car crash, botched back surgery and multiple sclerosis left
Paey in need of painkillers and a wheelchair. But in 1997 he was
arrested, accused of illegally possessing and trafficking in 700
pills obtained with fraudulent prescriptions. Authorities believed he
had to be selling, not using, that many pills.
Paey's supporters still contest every bit of the state's case. They
hope the governor and cabinet will commute his sentence to time
served and throw out a $500,000 fine.
In August the governor's office announced that Paey, a 48-year-old
Hudson father of three, was granted a waiver allowing his case to be
heard today.
Usually petitioners must wait until they have served a third of their
sentences before they can ask for clemency.
Flannery and Paey's family were supposed to have just five minutes at
the waiver hearing, too, but instead were allowed to speak for more
than an hour.
The lawyer doesn't know if he'll get more than five minutes this
time. Regardless, his argument will be a succinct one: Criminal drug
laws are inadequate to deal with the medical problem of pain management.
"All of us have a ... concern that controlled substances are
addictive," Flannery said. "But we forget the flip side of that ...
there are people who need treatment and for them these medications
are a miracle.
"Without these medications their life is a living hell."
It takes three out of four votes to grant clemency. If the clemency
board - the governor and Cabinet - turn Paey down, he'll have to wait
more than four years to apply again.
To impress the clemency board, Paey gave up his appeal to the U.S.
Supreme Court.
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