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Monday, May 19, 2008
Mike S. Adams :: Townhall.com Columnist
University Awards Criminal Justice Degree to Cocaine Dealer
by Mike S. Adams
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This will be, without question, the most difficult column I’ve ever had to write. But the drug problem at UNC-Wilmington (where I teach) has gotten so widespread that I have to say something. To do otherwise would be professional malpractice even if it means commenting on recent cases involving some of my students.

Just last year I told one of my upper level classes that, under our Constitution, states should have the right to pass laws allowing for the execution of drug dealers. That does not mean that I actually support the execution of drug dealers but that the Eight Amendment should not prohibit it. Nor should it prohibit the execution of sixteen year old killers or those who rape adults. The Supreme Court obviously disagrees.

I did not know that at the time a student listening to my lecture was facing imminent arrest and prosecution for dealing powdered cocaine in very high volumes. Just before his arrest I was tipped off by a police officer who informed me that he was in deep enough to make multiple home purchases with cash. This was despite the fact that he was only twenty years old.

Naturally, he soon found himself out of school and in the plea bargaining process. Remarkably, he was able to negotiate a plea that resulted in only a few months of consecutive jail time. Thus, after only missing one full semester of school he returned to UNC-Wilmington in the spring of 2008 while still serving prison time on the weekends. He received his B.A. in Criminal Justice from UNCW on May 10th.

Shortly after his graduation I sent a letter to him to see how he was holding up and what he planned to do in the future. He thanked me for not looking down on him for what he had done adding that it meant a great deal to him. Of course, the notion that I do not look down on him for what he did is rather silly. I just decided not to bother communicating my feelings of disappointment to him. I will instead direct my comments elsewhere.

First, and most obviously, the criminal justice system has failed in this case. People who engage in widespread dealing of highly addictive illegal drugs should be given a chance to rat out other dealers in exchange for lighter sentences. But the reduction should be from decades to years, not from years to mere months. Such light sentences fail to take seriously the damaged lives left in the wake of illegal activity like that of my student. Cocaine destroys lives and heavy dealers should be punished heavily.

Second, there has been an obvious failure of leadership within the ranks of our university administration. It could be argued that a student should eventually be readmitted to UNCW even after a felony conviction for cocaine dealing. But the notion of a) only having the student sit out one semester and b) readmitting him before he even finished serving his sentence for cocaine trafficking is preposterous. Continued...

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About The Author
Mike Adams is a criminology professor at the University of North Carolina Wilmington and author of Feminists Say the Darndest Things: A Politically Incorrect Professor Confronts "Womyn" On Campus.
 
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Subject: Thank you, Anne!!
...for recognizing the whole point of this article: the irony of one being awarded a Criminal Justice degree after being arrested for dealing ILLEGAL drugs. The school/admin is too boneheaded to see that this guy BROKE the law and should have been kicked out of school, in the first place!

Smoking pot or doing other drugs recreationally is one thing(I do not CONDONE this behavior) but the sale and distribution is something else, esp. from one who is persuing a degree in CRIMINAL JUSTICE!!!

Judgment??
"How can we make a judgment about whether the student is rehabilitated if he has not yet finished his sentence?"

Uh, well, you can't make that judgement, so don't even worry about it. You work for a University, not the justice system. It's not your place to make a judgment. Shut up and do your damn job.
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