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News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Column: Disabled Man's Justice May Be Served Cold
Title:US FL: Column: Disabled Man's Justice May Be Served Cold
Published On:2007-06-24
Source:Tampa Tribune (FL)
Fetched On:2008-08-16 23:31:26
DISABLED MAN'S JUSTICE MAY BE SERVED COLD

To pass the time in prison, and Richard Paey certainly has nothing but
time, the man the Pasco County Sheriff's Office tried to suggest was
the Carlos Lehder of Oxycodone uses domino pieces to laboriously
sculpt tiny works of art.

But if there is any fairness in this insane case of prosecutors gone
bonkers, with a little bit of luck and a whole lot of justice, come
Sept. 20, it's possible the last tile will drop in Richard Paey's favor.

Since May 2004, the 48-year-old Paey has been an inmate in the Florida
prison system, serving a 25-year term after his conviction on seven
counts of drug trafficking, possession and obtaining a controlled
substance by fraud.

And it's all first-degree balderdash.

Paey's legal nightmare began in 1997 when Pasco County Sheriff's
Office sleuths, vying perhaps for the Barney Fife Lifetime Achievement
Award, raided the lawyer's home and discovered stockpiles of
painkillers such as Percocet, Vicodin and the aforementioned
Oxycodone. A Clue?

Paey insisted the drugs were for his own personal use and had been
legally obtained by prescription from his New Jersey doctor.

Indeed, had the sheriff's gumshoes looked just a pinch closer at Paey,
they would have found a man in a wheelchair as a result of horrific
back injuries suffered in a car accident, who was also suffering from
multiple sclerosis.

Somehow those clues managed to elude the eagle-eyed Sherlock
Holmes-like detectives.

In what seemed like a good idea at the time, Paey, taking the radical
position that he was innocent, declined various plea offers that would
have resulted in little or no jail time.

And in fact, at trial, no evidence was presented linking Paey to any
sale and/or distribution of drugs. Nor did prosecutors provide any
proof Paey forged prescriptions.

Yet in a miscarriage of justice that has to qualify as the Dreyfus
affair of Pasco County, Paey was still found guilty. And for
irritating the court by rejecting the plea deals, a handicapped man
who is less of a threat to society than Bess Truman found himself off
to the hoosegow, for all practical purposes, for the rest of his life.
Righting A Wrong

And the Paey debacle only grew more bizarre.

This year, the Second District Court of Appeals, in grudgingly
upholding the technically legal conviction of the defendant, also
agreed, "Mr. Paey's argument about his sentence does not fall on deaf
ears, but it falls on the wrong ears," urging the Clemency Board to
right the moral wrong of this case.

According to Paey's attorney, John P. Flannery II of Leesburg, Va.,
petitioners seeking a pardon or clemency must serve at least a third
of their sentence before their cases can be heard by the board, which
is made up of Gov. Charlie Crist, Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink,
Attorney General Bill McCollum and Agriculture Commissioner Charles
Bronson.

But a few days ago, Paey was notified by the Office of Executive
Clemency that he had been granted a waiver to have his plea for mercy
be heard at the board's next scheduled meeting, Sept. 20.

Flannery regarded the development as "most encouraging. Now we do
what's most difficult: we wait and pray."

It's about time a chip fell in Richard Paey's favor.
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