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News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Editorial: The Nonsensical Trial Over 58 Vicodin Pills
Title:US FL: Editorial: The Nonsensical Trial Over 58 Vicodin Pills
Published On:2007-07-23
Source:St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Fetched On:2008-08-16 21:07:09
THE NONSENSICAL TRIAL OVER 58 VICODIN PILLS

An appellate court may finally have rescued Mark O'Hara from a life in
prison, but nothing excuses the prosecutorial indulgence that put him
there. If possession of 58 doctor-prescribed Vicodin pain pills
constitutes drug trafficking, then Florida might as well begin
building high-rise prisons.

The trial and conviction so confounded the 2nd District Court of
Appeal that Chief Judge Stevan Northcutt must have rushed to his
thesaurus. In calling for a new trial, he described the state's
arguments in words like "unreasonable" and "ridiculous" and "absurd."
Here's another: inexplicable.

O'Hara is no stranger to illegal drugs. He served a few years in the
1980s for trafficking in cocaine and possessing a hallucinogen, and
Tampa airport police found a misdemeanor amount of marijuana when they
pulled over his bread truck three years ago. But his previous
experience with the law doesn't somehow convert the 58 Vicodin pills
in his truck into a cache of lethal drugs.

Still, Hillsborough State Attorney Mark Ober sought a trafficking
conviction with a 25-year mandatory sentence.

Two doctors testified at the trial that they had prescribed the pills
for pain from gout and an automobile accident, and no one claimed he
was selling the pills. But Ober's attorneys and Hillsborough Circuit
Judge Ronald Ficarrotta stopped jurors from being told that the law
specifically exempts those who have legally prescribed pills.

"If we were to accept the state's assertion that there is no
prescription exception to the offense of drug trafficking by
possession," Northcutt wrote, "then we would have to conclude that any
person who leaves a pharmacy with only one day's worth of properly
prescribed Vicodin in hand is guilty of drug trafficking."

The jury foreman in the trial, upon hearing the ruling of the appeals
court, told a reporter he had felt "handcuffed" by the judge's
instructions. "I'm not going to sleep tonight," he said. "That's
definitely an injustice."

Ober should feel the same way. The ruling leaves him with essentially
no case, and it shouldn't take him 30 days to ask that O'Hara be
released from prison.

O'Hara is only the latest victim of Florida's schizophrenic drug laws.
Richard Paey, a Pasco man who suffers debilitating back pain from an
auto accident and botched surgery, is also serving 25 years for
possessing larger quantities of prescription pain killers. In Paey's
case, Gov. Charlie Crist is being asked to consider clemency, which
common decency would dictate.

What the Legislature should draw from these cases is that laws written
to put away drug kingpins are being used by prosecutors to punish
people in pain. Surely that was not the intent of lawmakers, which is
why they need to rewrite the law.
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