OK - Kevin Ott, 56, Released after 23 Years. Three Strikes Life Imprisonment: Drug Offenses

PastTense

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  • #1
"It’s a Tuesday morning in August, but Betty Chism wraps 23 Christmas presents on her day off. Her son, Kevin Ott, is set to be released from the Oklahoma prison system this week, though no one has told her exactly when. Still, Chism, 75, wants to be prepared before she makes the two-and-a-half-hour drive to pick up her son from his prison.


Ott, 56, has been in prison since 1996 and sentenced to life without parole the following year under Oklahoma’s three strikes law for non-violent drug-related convictions. Like many others caught in the net of America’s prison system, and in his case in the state known as the “world’s prison capital”, he has a history of offenses ranging from a failure to display a tax stamp on controlled dangerous substances to two felonies related to drug possession.


His final conviction for drug-trafficking three and a half ounces of methamphetamines led to his life in prison sentence."

Out of prison after 23 years, thanks to his mother and a documentary
 
  • #2
I'd feel more sorry for him if he had been in prison for pot.

But he was trafficking METH, one of the ugliest, most addictive and destructive drugs around.

3 and 1/2 ounces is all they charged him with. I bet they dropped some of the charges before trial.

I hate meth. It causes a lot of the violent crime that we read about here.

Life was too long. But 23 years sounds about right. imo
 
  • #3
‘I Was Wrong’

In 1996, police caught Ott with meth and a handgun in his trailer. He had two prior felonies for drug possession, one for having marijuana plants, the other for a bag of meth police found in his pocket as he left a bar.

Ott had worked a series of blue-collar jobs, from oil-rig roughneck to carpenter. He says he started using and selling meth after he got laid off. His addiction fueled one bad choice after another.

"I am smart enough to know I was wrong in all I was doing," Ott said.



So he had two prior drug felonies, and was busted AGAIN for dealing drugs. And had a hand gun, illegally.

How many chances should someone get to STOP selling hard drugs? He should have known he could get searched again.
 

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