Happy 90th Birthday Leo Sharp .... Drug mule, going to jail

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[h=1]Michigan Drug 'Mule' Leo Sharp Gets 3 Years on 90th Birthday[/h]
<address class="stack-byline">By Hasani Gittens</address> 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."
<figure id="ember991" class="ember-view image spanFull">
140507-leo-sharp-1742_a84a64a92d7a642b319f54b6dcfe75fd.nbcnews-ux-680-900.jpg
<small class="stack-credit-art-figcaption">Ed White / AP</small>
<figcaption class="stack-figcaption">Leo Sharp walks toward U.S. District Court before his scheduled sentencing, on May 7 in Detroit. The Indiana man, who turned 90 on Wednesday, was convicted of hauling more than a ton of cocaine to Michigan for drug dealers.

</figcaption> </figure>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."


Sharp's attorney later said he didn't believe his client was a harm to himself.


"Leo Sharp loves life too much," Goldberg told NBC News. "I am not concerned about him taking his own life."


He has asked that Sharp be sent to the Federal Medical Center in Rochester, Minnesota, which specializes in long-term medical care, but the Bureau of Prisons has yet to make a determination.
[h=5]— with The Associated Press[/h]
 

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They should have sentenced him to a nursing home. Half of them are 10 times worse than prison...
 

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It sounds like they were very lenient to me. I had an ex brother-in-law that got 17 years for 2 ounces. (he got out on parole after 6) ....of course he had been under surveillence for several months and had sold to an undercover narc .... but still theres a problem with the system when 2 oz gets 17 years and 104 lbs gets 3 years.
 

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They need to rethink this whole process. It isn't working. Does anybody think this old dude is the only senior citizen drug mule? The war on drugs is a lost cause. There's more people killed over drugs than by drugs.
 

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I agree the drug war is ridiculous, but ya can't be smuggling coke for the Cartel and make a million bucks and expect to not go to jail. If this guy wasn't 90 this would be a minimum 10 year sentence and probably more.
 

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Not far up the road from me....i say give him parole and a home monitoring device.
 

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Cry me a river old man. You smuggle drugs and get caught, you go to prison. Anyone else caught with that type of load would've got a minimum of 25 years.
 

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Cry me a river old man. You smuggle drugs and get caught, you go to prison. Anyone else caught with that type of load would've got a minimum of 25 years.

Typically i agree but why not save the State $40,000 and put him on home lock down?
 

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Typically i agree but why not save the State $40,000 and put him on home lock down?

i think alternative punishments are a good way to save state funds for petty crimes. But this was a serious crime. I agree with the idea of saving $ but just really think the old guy truly deserves to be punished for his crime. And to threaten suicide is as low as it gets. I just don't feel sorry for him.
 

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Typically i agree but why not save the State $40,000 and put him on home lock down?

Were talking 200 pounds of cocaine. NOBODY can get house arrest for that amount.

...And btw , this is a federal charge not a state charge.

But i would agree they should send him to the medical facility in Minnesota and not Levinworth.
 

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Not that I feel that sorry for him, unless he truly has some sort of dementia. But the bigger picture still remains that if he said no to being a drug mule, can anybody with a straight face say those drugs wouldn't have still been delivered?
 

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Wherever he ends up, i hope they have some nose hair trimmers and tweezers he can use.
 

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Were talking 200 pounds of cocaine. NOBODY can get house arrest for that amount.

...And btw , this is a federal charge not a state charge.

But i would agree they should send him to the medical facility in Minnesota and not Levinworth.

Fed charges can be reduced to house arrest....seen it personally myself.
 

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Fed charges can be reduced to house arrest....seen it personally myself.

Thats true , but still , 200 pounds ? 3 years is as easy as they could go. ...And i assume his age along with being a vet got him the soft sentence.

I respect my elders but 3 years for 200 pounds isnt fair.
 

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Wherever he ends up, i hope they have some nose hair trimmers and tweezers he can use.

lol , and whats that on his coat , dandruff or peruvian flake residue ?
 

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