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----- Original Message -----
From: Sandeep Vaidya (LMI) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: STOPNATO (E-mail) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, June 20, 2001 4:49 PM
Subject: Just four cookies and you're out - for 25 years [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]


STOP NATO: NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK

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Just four cookies and you're out - for 25 years
Duncan Campbell in Los Angeles
Wednesday June 20, 2001
The Guardian
His offence was the theft of four cookies from a restaurant. His punishment was jail
for 25 years to life.
Now an appeal court in California has upheld the sentence for a homeless man who had
fallen foul of the state's "three strikes" law, under which anyone committing three
crimes is liable to spend between 25 years and life in jail.
Kevin Weber has served more than five years for the theft in 1995 of the four cookies,
but a Santa Ana appeal court has decided he is a career criminal and the sentence
should stand. He may not be released until 2021.
The case is the most extreme example of California's three strikes law since a man was
jailed for 25 years in 1994 for grabbing a slice of pizza from some children. His
sentence was reduced on appeal.
Weber had broken into a restaurant in Santa Ana through an air vent. The appeal court
argued that had he not been caught when a burglar alarm was activated he would
probably have stolen more items. "A safe-cracker who cracks an empty safe is
nonetheless a safe-cracker," said Justice David Sills in a unanimous judgment.
"It shocks one's conscience to think that a man could spend the rest of his life in
prison for stealing four cookies," said public defender Carl Holmes, whose office
defended the homeless alcoholic. "For some unapparent reason the system still has no
sense of compassion."
The case may be appealed to the supreme court on the grounds that a life sentence for
the non-violent theft of four cookies is a cruel and unusual punishment. A plea for
clemency may also be made to Governor Gray Davis.
Weber's previous offences include burglary, assault with a firearm and receiving
stolen goods. He qualified for the sentence because he had committed three felonies
which made him subject to the so-called Three Strikes and You're Out law, approved by
California voters in 1994.
Critics of the law say there is no indication that it has reduced crime. Its
supporters say it takes hardened criminals off the streets. The US jails 25% of all
prisoners in the world although it accounts for only 5% of the world's population.
There are 2m people in US jails, 400,000 of them for drug offences and 70% of them
from racial minorities.
Guardian Unlimited � Guardian Newspapers Limited 2001


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