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Michigan Drug 'Mule' Leo Sharp Gets 3 Years on 90th Birthday

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  • Michigan Drug 'Mule' Leo Sharp Gets 3 Years on 90th Birthday

    Oh boy...




    A World War II veteran was sentenced to three years in federal prison on Wednesday — his 90th birthday — for working as a Mexican cartel's drug mule.

    Leo Sharp was hauling 104 bricks of cocaine (over 200 pounds) on a highway near Chelsea, Mich., when he was pulled over in 2011 for an illegal lane change.

    According to documents filed in U.S. District Court in Detroit, he had been running cocaine and other drugs as early as 2009, when he was just 86.

    He also hauled duffle bags stuffed with cash back to the southwest border of the United States for the criminal organization that was part of Mexico's Sinaloa cartel, prosecutors said.

    Last week he was ordered to pay a half-million-dollar fine, and it was believed the judge in the case would show some leniency because of his age.

    But on Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Nancy Edmunds said she couldn't justify not putting Sharp behind bars considering the nature of his crime.

    "This is not a victimless crime," Edmunds said. "This is a very serious offense."

    Edmunds gave Sharp three years in jail, plus an additional three years of supervised release.

    Before he was sentenced, Sharp pleaded for mercy, and indicated that he might take his own life.

    “I’m really heartbroken I did what I did. But it’s done,” Sharp said, according to the Detroit Free Press. “I won’t live in prison, I’m just going to end my life if I end up there.”

    Afterward, Sharp turned to prosecutors and called the three-year prison term a "death sentence."

    Sharp received numerous decorations for valor for his service with the Army's 88th Infantry during its nearly year-long march through Italy to Austria in 1944 and 1945, military records show.

    More than 15,000 members of the 88th were killed or wounded in the 344 days the unit made its way through the Dolomite Mountains — a mission that included the famously bloody Battle for Mount Battaglia.

    “Mr. Sharp is part of a great generation…before we were even born, he was on top of mountains fighting Nazis,” defense attorney Darryl Goldberg, according to the Free Press. “That’s not how we honor our heroes whether they’ve fallen from grace or not.”

    The defense had asked for supervised release or home confinement, saying Sharp suffers from dementia and other health conditions and needs 24-hour monitoring.

    But Prosecutors argued that Sharp had managed to avoid detection for a decade in part because of his age and was now trying to use his age to shield himself from punishment.

    Edmunds said the effort to blame Sharp's actions on age and dementia was "an insult to all the people who struggle with dementia and don't become involved in illegal activity."


    More at Link
    May we raise children who love the unloved things - the dandelion, the worm, the spiderlings.
    Children who sense the rose needs the thorn and run into rainswept days the same way they turn towards the sun...
    And when they're grown and someone has to speak for those who have no voice,
    may they draw upon that wilder bond, those days of tending tender things and be the one.

  • #2
    Sorry, but if you have the ability to 'mule' cocaine into Michigan and to move large amounts of cash to our Southern border to turn over to the drug traffickers, you do not have dementia.

    I would probably agree to confinement at home, as putting the guy behind bars at his age is pointless.
    All you are doing is placing his health care and final demise expenses on the Michigan penal budget.

    On a side note, every time I see a large drug bust that is caused by a 'lane violation' I chuckle.
    It's damn obvious that someone got turned and the 'mule' was fingered and the 'lane violation' stop is probably utter bullshit but the cops don't want to tip on the informant that they offered immunity to if he/she dishes out the info.

    For years, I-44 was a corridor for drug shipments into Chicago.

    On a monthly basis, you would see articles about 57 gazillion tons of dope discovered on a routine traffic stop NE of Rolla Mo.

    Seriously.

    These transporters never learned?
    Don't have a broken tail light?
    Don't speed?
    Don't make improper lane changes?
    Don't forget to signal an exit?
    Wouldn't that be in the Mule 101 course? Wasn't there a written test?

    For some years, there was a sign on E bound I44, about 5 miles from a rest stop that said: Drug inspection at next rest stop..xx miles..

    Between the sign and the rest stop, there was one exit.
    It lead to nowhereville.. it was a legit exit, but no services and the nearest town was about 6 miles away, population 150.

    Mo Highway Patrol and DEA just sat at the exit (hidden) and pulled over anyone who exited.

    The funny part was, the sign was hand lettered... as if some criminal was warning the transporters...
    Robert Francis O'Rourke, Democrat, White guy, spent ~78 million to defeat, Ted Cruz, Republican immigrant Dark guy …
    and lost …
    But the Republicans are racist.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Gramps View Post
      Sorry, but if you have the ability to 'mule' cocaine into Michigan and to move large amounts of cash to our Southern border to turn over to the drug traffickers, you do not have dementia.

      I would probably agree to confinement at home, as putting the guy behind bars at his age is pointless.
      All you are doing is placing his health care and final demise expenses on the Michigan penal budget.
      This, though I expect that the jail probably has some way to put that cost off on the VA. After all, jails and prisons all over the country now are signing up prisoners for medicaid via Obamafail.

      Hell, at the rate the VA is going right now, prison medicine is a dramatic improvement..
      It's been ten years since that lonely day I left you
      In the morning rain, smoking gun in hand
      Ten lonely years but how my heart, it still remembers
      Pray for me, momma, I'm a gypsy now

      Comment


      • #4
        Terrible crime...but he is 90. I would agree with home confinement.
        Not where I breathe, but where I love, I live...
        Robert Southwell, S.J.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Adam View Post
          This, though I expect that the jail probably has some way to put that cost off on the VA. After all, jails and prisons all over the country now are signing up prisoners for medicaid via Obamafail.

          Hell, at the rate the VA is going right now, prison medicine is a dramatic improvement..
          cite?

          I would seriously doubt that the VA would pick up the medical expenses of a convicted felon.
          I'd have to see some proof of prior action.
          Robert Francis O'Rourke, Democrat, White guy, spent ~78 million to defeat, Ted Cruz, Republican immigrant Dark guy …
          and lost …
          But the Republicans are racist.

          Comment


          • #6
            I hope someone inside trims his nose hairs. Some images can not be unseen!!
            If it pays, it stays

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Gramps View Post
              cite?

              I would seriously doubt that the VA would pick up the medical expenses of a convicted felon.
              I'd have to see some proof of prior action.
              The Obama administration often touts that people with pre-existing conditions and countless others can now get covered under ObamaCare. But there's another group that's starting to benefit from the law -- prison inmates.




              Inmates are taking advantage of the expansion of Medicaid that allows states to extend coverage to single and childless adults — a major part of the prison population.
              It's been ten years since that lonely day I left you
              In the morning rain, smoking gun in hand
              Ten lonely years but how my heart, it still remembers
              Pray for me, momma, I'm a gypsy now

              Comment


              • #8
                I looked at those links.
                Admittedly, I didn't read all of it word for word, but I'm pretty sure there was no mention of the VA.
                Robert Francis O'Rourke, Democrat, White guy, spent ~78 million to defeat, Ted Cruz, Republican immigrant Dark guy …
                and lost …
                But the Republicans are racist.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Gramps View Post
                  I looked at those links.
                  Admittedly, I didn't read all of it word for word, but I'm pretty sure there was no mention of the VA.
                  You misunderstand. I'm not saying that the VA is presently picking up the costs of incarcerated felons. I'm merely speculating (admittedly somewhat tongue-in-cheek) that the prison might find a way to slough that cost off onto the VA.
                  It's been ten years since that lonely day I left you
                  In the morning rain, smoking gun in hand
                  Ten lonely years but how my heart, it still remembers
                  Pray for me, momma, I'm a gypsy now

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Frostbit View Post
                    I hope someone inside trims his nose hairs. Some images can not be unseen!!
                    That was the first thing I thought.

                    Like Philly, I also might prefer to see home confinement. I have to ask though what else he did as this drug cartel mule? Did he hurt anybody? I guess we shouldn't go by what he wasn't convicted of, but that's what I often think.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Lanie View Post
                      That was the first thing I thought.

                      Like Philly, I also might prefer to see home confinement. I have to ask though what else he did as this drug cartel mule? Did he hurt anybody? I guess we shouldn't go by what he wasn't convicted of, but that's what I often think.
                      While I'm far from an expert on the topic, I've certainly gotten my education over the last couple of years doing extraditions for MNPD.

                      It is my understanding that "mules" are called that for a reason: they are solely there to transport from A to B. They get some pay, though it's not a lot when one considers the risk involved and the overall profits of the drug trade. By the same token, they're not taking the BIG risks, which is the deals going down. Some mules are better than others, some handle more precious cargo than others, but generally speaking, they are simply transport logistics who get paid a not-small amount to keep their mouth shut and not look at or touch the merchandise.

                      That hardly means that their hands are "clean," though. They know what they are doing, they know that they are perpetuating the drug trade that leaves a whole lot of people dead, they know that what they are doing is very, very illegal, and they know that what they are doing ultimately harms people in a very real and very direct way.

                      In the case of our local PD, they tend to "turn" the mules to get to the real bad guys, but then most mules aren't hauling hundreds of kilos of drugs nor hauling duffelbags full of cash, either.



                      Think of it this way:

                      Drug mule: "I was just a driver. I know that it was drugs I was hauling, but I just get paid to drive it from A to B. Yeah, people get hurt from it, but I just drive."
                      Coyote: "I was just a driver. I know that it was trafficked humans I was hauling, but I just get paid to drive it from A to B. Yeah, people get hurt from it, but I just drive."

                      Yes, human trafficking is directly far more harmful than drug trafficking. But in the end, both know that what they are doing ultimately results in a lot of death and misery. Neither are innocent by any stretch of the imagination.
                      It's been ten years since that lonely day I left you
                      In the morning rain, smoking gun in hand
                      Ten lonely years but how my heart, it still remembers
                      Pray for me, momma, I'm a gypsy now

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Valor does not excuse willful participation in a criminal enterprise. This man should be honored for his service and his actions on the battlefield should define his contribution to humanity. However, even the most heroic among us tend to be flawed and we should be held accountable. This is a growing trend, and something we'll see more frequently. War heroes aren't exactly the type to follow the rules all the time. This man probably did a cost-benefit analysis and rolled the dice, figuring he was already done and could at least do something for someone. He might have gotten away with this for years knowing that he was beyond reproach (unless someone ratted him out).

                        He survived WWII, he can survive prison. He did the crime, he should do the time. It's not like there's a lot of street cred in shanking an old man.

                        Leave the prison part off his tombstone though.
                        "Faith is nothing but a firm assent of the mind : which, if it be regulated, as is our duty, cannot be afforded to anything but upon good reason, and so cannot be opposite to it."
                        -John Locke

                        "It's all been melded together into one giant, authoritarian, leftist scream."
                        -Newman

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Lanie View Post
                          That was the first thing I thought.

                          Like Philly, I also might prefer to see home confinement. I have to ask though what else he did as this drug cartel mule? Did he hurt anybody? I guess we shouldn't go by what he wasn't convicted of, but that's what I often think.
                          Supplying the drug chain with more drugs from Mexico usually ends up harming or hurting someone.

                          Lock the old bastard up before the cartel starts to recruit more mules from the senior center.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            My history project for the bar this year is focusing on our first black judge. He was an amazing man, and universally loved by all members of the bench and bar. Nice doesn't come close to describing this man. In reviewing some of the news articles written about him after he retired, I came across this gem.

                            "Although appearing rather somber when on the bench, Senior Judge Robert A. Wright is not without a sense of humor. Like the time a convicted burglar begged for a shorter sentence after the judge had sentenced him to 20 years. 'But Judge,' he pleaded, 'I'm a 70-year-old. I'll never be able to finish the sentence!' 'Well,' Wright said, 'do the very best you can.'
                            Last edited by phillygirl; Friday, May 9, 2014, 7:39 AM.
                            Not where I breathe, but where I love, I live...
                            Robert Southwell, S.J.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by phillygirl View Post
                              My history project for the bar this year is focusing on our first black judge. He was an amazing man, and universally loved by all members of the bench and bar. Nice doesn't come close to describing this man. In reviewing some of the new articles written about him after he retired, I came across this gem.

                              "Although appearing rather somber when on the bench, Senior Judge Robert A. Wright is not without a sense of humor. Like the time a convicted burglar begged for a shorter sentence after the judge had sentenced him to 20 years. 'But Judge,' he pleaded, 'I'm a 70-year-old. I'll never be able to finish the sentence!' 'Well,' Wright said, 'do the very best you can.'
                              It's been ten years since that lonely day I left you
                              In the morning rain, smoking gun in hand
                              Ten lonely years but how my heart, it still remembers
                              Pray for me, momma, I'm a gypsy now

                              Comment

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