cannabisnews.com: Help Keep Peter McWilliams out of Prison...& Alive Help Keep Peter McWilliams out of Prison...& Alive Posted by FoM on February 03, 2000 at 12:59:33 PT DrugSense FOCUS Alert # 159 Feb. 2, 2000 Source: MapInc. My name is Peter McWilliams. I am a cancer survivor living with AIDS. I was arrested in July 1998 on federal medical marijuana charges, even though I live in California, a state that approved medical marijuana use in 1996.In November 1999, the federal prosecutors successfully obtained an order prohibiting me from mentioning to the jury that I have AIDS, that marijuana is medicine, that the federal government supplies eight patients with medical marijuana each month, or that California has a law permitting the very act that I was accused of violating. As I never denied my medical marijuana cultivation, that left me with no defense whatsoever. To avoid an almost certain guilty verdict and a ten-year mandatory-minimum sentence, I pled guilty to a lesser charge. The whole story is at http://www.petertrial.com/ My sentencing for this charge will be on March 27, 2000. The deadline for turning in letters of support is February 20, 2000. Would you please take the time to send a letter, or a fax, or even an e-mail, to the judge on my behalf? It would make all the difference in my world.The letter need not be long or eloquent. One sentence is sufficient.The judge can sentence me to 0 to 5 years. The federal sentencing guidelines place my recommended (but not mandatory) sentence in the 5-year range. It is probably unavoidable that I get a sentenced to some time -- perhaps the full five years. What I am asking the judge -- and what I am asking you to ask the judge -- is that I be able to serve my sentence under "home detention," also known as "electronic monitoring." (An electronic transmitter would be permanently fastened to my ankle and my whereabouts would be monitored 24 hours a day. I would not be able to leave my home except for medical or court appointments. As I live in Los Angeles, this will allow me to write my books, including Galileo LA.)In writing the Judge King, please observe these commonsense guidelines:1. Please be respectful. The judge owes me, or you, nothing. You are asking for a favor. When Judge King was asked to allow me to use medical marijuana while out on bail, he said to the attorneys on both sides, in a voice trembling with compassion, "I am struggling mightily with this. Please, struggle with me." Alas, there was nothing in federal law that permitted him to allow me to break federal law, even to save my life, but I believed the sincerity of his struggle. Personally, I don't want judges rewriting law as they see fit. Judge King is a good judge upholding a bad law. My sentence, however, is at his discretion. I believe he will be fair, that he will read the letter you send, and he will be moved by your heartfelt request. I believe we owe courtesy to the King. 2. Please focus on my health http://www.petertrial.com/undetectable.htm and my contributions to society through my books http://www.mcwilliams.com/books/ as reasons why I should receive home detention or electronic monitoring (the term can be used interchangeably). The legal arguments will be made by my attorney.3. If you know me, please say so, and state any positive character traits you may have noticed wafting by from time to time. (This letter is not written under oath, so you will not be arrested for perjury.) 4. If you have read any of my books, please say so. If they helped you, please say how. (Exception: Please do not mention "Ain't Nobody's Business if You Do." See 5.)5. Please do not give your opinion of the War on Drugs (unless you're in favor of it), how the government treated me in this case (unless you approve), your views on medical marijuana (unless you're against it), or anything else critical of the status quo. Save those remarks, however well-reasoned and accurate, for letters-to-the-editor. Such comments may be counterproductive in a letter to a federal judge. 6. If you can, please keep the letter to one page, and no longer than two.Actual letters (those things made popular in the last millennium, printed on paper, put into envelopes, and sent through the Post Office) are best. Typed is better, but handwritten is fine. Please use the most impressive letterhead to which you have legitimate access. (Your business stationery is better than your personal stationery, for example.) If you don't have stationery, you can create a letterhead on any word processor in about two minutes. Finally, please circulate this request as widely as you can -- post it on bulletin boards, send it to receptive people on your e-mail list, send it out in newsletters, put it on your web page. Kindly use your creativity, but, please, no spamming. If you cannot post the entire message of this missive, the online address of this request is: http://www.petertrial.com/letters.htmThank you from the bottom of my weary but very grateful heart.Enjoy.Peter McWilliams peter mcwilliams.com Thanks for your effort and support. WRITE A LETTER TODAYIt's not what others do it's what YOU do PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER OR TELL US WHAT YOU DID (Letter, Phone, fax etc.)Please post a copy your letter or report your action to the sent letter list (sentlet mapinc.org) if you are subscribed, or by E-mailing a copy directly to MGreer mapinc.org Your letter will then be forwarded to the list with so others can learn from your efforts and be motivated to follow suit This is VERY IMPORTANT as it is the only way we have of gauging our impact and effectiveness.CONTACT INFO:Please address the letters to:"The Honorable George H. King"and begin the letter:"Dear Judge King,"Please mail the letters TO ME at: Peter McWilliams8165 Mannix DriveLos Angeles, California 90046If you know you're probably not going to get around to writing a letter (and I know just how you feel -- I don't know where to find an envelope any more, much less a stamp -- please send a fax (signed, on letterhead, if possible, but if not, that's fine) to: 323-650-1541If you think you might not get around to sending a fax, please send an e-mail. Please write at the bottom of the e-mail "You have my permission to reformat this letter, print it, and sign my name at the bottom." Your name will be signed for you, next to which will be the initials of the person signing it. Please include your complete mailing address.The e-mail address is peter mcwilliams.com NOTE: This Focus Alert was written in large part by Peter McWilliams. The sample letter below was written by Mark Greer. SAMPLE LETTER (sent)DrugSensePO Box 651 Porterville,CA 93259(800) 266-5759February 2, 2000Dear Judge King:I have followed and admired Peter McWilliams for many years. His books have informed and educated millions. If you would take the time to read Peter's book "Life 101" available in print and on the Internet at: http://www.mcwilliams.com/books/books/life1/ it would quickly become immediately obvious that he is not only no threat to society but a tremendous asset.Sometime this month the Land of the Free will attain the dubious distinction of incarcerating prisoner number 2 million. How did we come to be the very best at putting our people behind bars and the very worst at confusing who should be there and who should not? Including Peter McWilliams in that group will accomplish nothing positive and much that is negative for our country not the least of which will be yet another $25,000 per year incarceration expense levied on our citizens.As you know Peter has serious health problems. Incarcerating him for any period of time would be akin to a death sentence. It is hard to believe that he deserves this regardless of the charges against him. If he must serve time I believe that it is in Peter's interest, the best interest of our society, and in the interest of justice and reasonable adjudication that he be allowed home monitoring as opposed to incarceration.As a tax payer and a lover of freedom and our Constitution I respectfully request that you allow Peter his freedom for the time he has left on this earth.Sincerely,Mark Greer Executive Director MGreer mapinc.org http//www.mapinc.org - http://www.drugsense.org/TO SUBSCRIBE, DONATE, VOLUNTEER TO HELP, OR UPDATE YOUR EMAIL SEE: http://www.drugsense.org/hurry.htm TO UNSUBSCRIBE SEE http://www.drugsense.org/unsub.htm ADDITIONAL INFO to help you in your letter writing efforts3 Tips for Letter Writers http://www.mapinc.org/3tips.htm Letter Writers Style Guide http://www.mapinc.org/style.htm Prepared by Peter McWilliams peter mcwilliams.com Focus Alert Specialist Search Of Cannabis News Articles On Peter McWilliams - Over 130 Articles:http://www.alltheweb.com/cgi-bin/asearch?type=all&query=cannabisnews+Peter+McWilliams Home Comment Email Register Recent Comments Help Comment #7 posted by FoM on February 04, 2000 at 12:38:13 PT Let Me Know! Clarity let me jump in here and say if your post didn't work right and it happens again please mention it so we can get it fixed if there is a problem.Thanks Everyone! I sure appreciate all these great comments!Peace, FoM! [ Post Comment ] Comment #6 posted by CongressmanSuet on February 04, 2000 at 09:28:16 PT Clarity needs a "Truth whipping" Clarity, time for some new glasses! The man was not allowed to get the pertinent facts of his case out to the jury, and therefore ,in my opinion was denied a fair trial.Fear of the truth? There was no truth. And the fact that Peter still has a sense of humor while facing jail time is commendable. Reading your posts, I know you dont get it, and thats a shame. [ Post Comment ] Comment #5 posted by Clarity on February 04, 2000 at 07:19:11 PT The question The end of my prior post was deleted on submission. It read "Ah...I get it. Tell the judge anything that will keep him from imposing a jail sentence, regardless of the truth or the completeness of the picture. Gee, is this an exception to "Freedom has nothing to fear from the truth"? [ Post Comment ] Comment #4 posted by Clarity on February 04, 2000 at 07:16:37 PT A questoin >>3. If you know me, please say so, and state any positive character traits you may have noticed wafting by from time to time. (This letter is not written under oath, so you will not be arrested for perjury.) 4. If you have read any of my books, please say so. If they helped you, please say how. (Exception: Please do not mention "Ain't Nobody's Business if You Do." See 5.) [ Post Comment ] Comment #3 posted by FoM on February 03, 2000 at 20:36:51 PT Thanks Dankhank! Thanks Dankhank! I hope many people will write. Peter can't go to jail. It is wrong. There isn't one thing right about the whole case. I think Peter is a fine person. I get his mailers and I always enjoy reading them. There is no justice if he goes to jail. They then will become murderers because an AIDS patient can't be exposed to illness or it can very easily kill them.Thanks Again FoM! [ Post Comment ] Comment #2 posted by kaptinemo on February 03, 2000 at 20:16:53 PT So have I, and perhaps we all should McWilliams has been the 'point man' on the battlefield, defending our rights for some time, and he has paid the penultimate price. Because he was so vocal, because he was so articulate and witty, because he so effectively laid out the flaws in the DrugWar and idiocies of prosecuting it, he was targeted. Coldly. Ruthlessly. And as the lawyers say, 'with malice aforethought'.They tried to kill him. Plain and simple. And they are still trying.By writing a letter to this Judge, you can stop that from happening. By keeping him out of prison, you keep a voice alive that reminds the DrugWarriors of a painful fact: for all their posturing, they have shown themselves to be failures and their cause lost as soon as it began. The very fact they stoop so low as to pull what they did on him, and gag him at his trial, and still threaten to kil him via incarceration, proves they are desperate.We don't need any martyrs. Don't let this man become one so the Neanderthal DrugWarriors can put another notch on their truncheons. [ Post Comment ] Comment #1 posted by Dankhank on February 03, 2000 at 14:47:26 PT: i did Ok folks ........I typed my letter, addressed it, will stamp and mail tonight.Let's get busy ..... Here's mine ... The Honorable George H. King Dear Judge King: I have followed and admired Peter McWilliams for many years. I believe him to be an honorable man struggling with a debilitating disease that is eased by his choice of medicine. If you would take the time to read Peter's book "Life 101" available in print and on the Internet at: http://www.mcwilliams.com/books/books/life1/ it would quickly become immediately obvious that he is not only no threat to society but a valuable voice for reason in America. Sometime this month the Land of the Free will attain the dubious distinction of incarcerating prisoner number 2 million. How did we come to be the very best at putting our people behind bars and the very worst at confusing who should be there and who should not? Including Peter McWilliams in that group will accomplish nothing positive and much that is negative for our country not the least of which will be yet another $25,000 per year incarceration expense levied on our citizens. As you know Peter has serious health problems. Incarcerating him for any period of time would be akin to a death sentence. It is hard to believe that he deserves this regardless of the charges against him. If he must serve time I believe that it is in Peter's interest, the best interest of our society, and in the interest of justice and reasonable adjudication that he be allowed home monitoring as opposed to incarceration. As a tax payer, a twenty-two year veteran of the US Army and a lover of freedom and our Constitution I respectfully request that you allow Peter his freedom for the time he has left on this earth. Respectfully yours, Hemp n Stuff [ Post Comment ] Post Comment Name: Optional Password: E-Mail: Subject: Comment: [Please refrain from using profanity in your message] Link URL: Link Title: