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Communist
4th March 2010, 01:55
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Cheese Thief Jailed for 7 Years in California (http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/03/cheese-thief-jailed-for-7-years-in-california/)
03-03-10
By ROBERT MACKEY

Updated 11:38 a.m. On Monday, more than a year after a man was arrested outside a market in California with a $3.99 bag of Tillamook shredded cheese in his pants he had not paid for, a judge decided to go relatively easy on him, sentencing him to seven years and eight months in jail.

Prosecutors in Yolo County, Calif., outside Sacramento, had originally asked for a life sentence under the states three strikes law, arguing that the man, Robert Preston Ferguson, was a menace to society because of prior burglary convictions. As The Sacramento Bee reported last month (http://www.sacbee.com/static/weblogs/crime/archives/2010/02/yolo-da-wont-se.html), the district attorneys office asked for 11 years instead, after a new psychological evaluation convinced prosecutors that Robert Preston Fergusons most recent convictions for petty theft did not warrant a life sentence.

At Mondays sentencing hearing, the Sacramento newspaper noted, a deputy district attorney said Ferguson was a career criminal who wouldnt change. The prosecutor added that Mr. Ferguson, who is in his 50s, had 13 previous convictions and had been in jail for 22 of the past 27 years but still took the cheese. Ten days before the cheese theft, Mr. Ferguson had also stolen a womans wallet from a 7-Eleven as she tended to her sick child, who had just thrown up on the floor.

Because of Mr. Fergusons prior convictions, he had been charged with felonies for both of those petty thefts.

According to the Sacramento newspaper, Mr. Fergusons defense lawyer, Monica Brushia, argued that his six other burglary convictions had taken place three decades ago and noted that his conviction for misdemeanor assault came when he was a teenager and had thrown a can of soda at one of his siblings. She also noted that the psychologists report had concluded that Mr. Ferguson was mentally ill. He has biploar syndrome and struggles to control his impulses to steal during manic phases, she said.
She concluded that his most recent thefts were petty. Were talking about a pack of cheese, she said.

Leaving aside concerns about whether the long sentence was just, some observers in California asked if the cash-strapped state should really be spending between $50,000 and $100,000 a year to lock up a cheese thief.

As Sasha Abramsky noted (http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2010/feb/19/three-strikes-california-cheese-thief) in a commentary on the case for The Guardian last month, a number of newspapers, including conservative publications such as the Orange County Register, ridiculed the D.A.s office (http://taxdollars.freedomblogging.com/2010/02/10/should-cheese-in-pants-mean-life-in-prison/51517/) for its willingness to waste taxpayer dollars.

The Orange County newspaper compared the case with that of Jerry Dewayne Williams, a man in Los Angeles who was sentenced in 1995 to 25 years to life for stealing a slice of pizza (http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-pizzathief10-2010feb10,0,5032512.story).

In his column for The Guardian, Mr. Abramsky added:
Three strikes is something that I have written on quite a bit over the years; I have talked with many three strikers and their families, and periodically receive updates from them on their status. This past Christmas I got a card from the wife of one inmate, who has spent the last 16 years behind bars on a drug-related offence. It is hard to believe that nearly 16- years have gone by and we still have another 12 before D** will be eligible for parole, she wrote. You would think that with all of Californias budget problems, someone in Sacramento would realize that 16 years for a minor offence is long enough.
A columnist for Sacramento Bee, Marcos Breton, took the opposite view, arguing on Wednesday (http://www.sacbee.com/2010/03/03/2577905_marcos-breton-cheese-thief-should.html) that this shoplifter with a sad life deserves to be in jail:
The truth is, there is a good chance Ferguson will victimize someone again. He has nearly 30 years experience as a career criminal. What if he breaks into a home, stumbles in on a family and panics?
You wonder if the people screaming about his treatment now would be screaming then, too, asking how it is he ever got back on the street in the first place.
Update: Thanks to a reader for drawing our attention to a report in The Los Angeles Times (http://articles.latimes.com/2010/feb/04/local/la-me-kennedy4-2010feb04) last month on a speech by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy in which he criticized Californias sentencing policies. The report noted:
In an otherwise courtly and humorous address to the Los Angeles legal community, Kennedy expressed obvious dismay over the state of corrections and rehabilitation in the country. He said U.S. sentences are eight times longer than those issued by European courts.
California now has 185,000 people in prison at $32,500 a year each, he said. He then urged voters and officials to compare that expense to what taxpayers spend per pupil in elementary schools. The three-strikes law sponsor is the correctional officers union and that is sick! Kennedy said of the measure mandating life sentences for third-time criminal offenders.

FreeFocus
4th March 2010, 02:11
The three strikes rule is such anti-working class bullshit. No one should even be threatened with life in prison for stealing. What the fuck.

This is also ridiculously excessive, 7 years for cheese?! Pretty grimy that Ferguson stole a woman's wallet when she was helping her sick child though.

Robocommie
4th March 2010, 02:52
The state's put this guy in prison for 22 of his 50 years and they blame HIM for being a career criminal.

I wonder what his first offense was, stealing a loaf of bread?

This is what our government wants us to understand; you steal a four dollar bag of cheese, you'll go to jail for 7 years, if you're lucky. But steal an entire fucking economy? The government will give you billions of dollars.

The Vegan Marxist
4th March 2010, 04:56
The crime is not the fact this person stole cheese, but the fact that he was put in jail for stealing cheese. This, right here, is an act of capitalism, no doubt.

Robocommie
4th March 2010, 05:53
Man, there was this really salient point in this movie, Let's Go To Prison: "It costs $54 a day to keep a person in prison, which comes out to $75 million a day nationally. That's $28 billion a year. When you think about it, wouldn't it be cheaper just to let us keep your goddamn car stereos?"

Bitter Ashes
5th March 2010, 14:55
When you think about it, wouldn't it be cheaper just to let us keep our goddamn car stereos?"
Fixed. Capitalists thieve the products of our labor in the first place. All stealing is, is taking it back to its rightful owners.

Robocommie
5th March 2010, 16:56
Fixed. Capitalists thieve the products of our labor in the first place. All stealing is, is taking it back to its rightful owners.

Yes and no, I mean, the character saying this was not exactly a worker.

Bitter Ashes
5th March 2010, 18:27
Yes and no, I mean, the character saying this was not exactly a worker.
I'm sure that at the very least he was used as 1 a day labour at the prison. He doesnt own any means of production himself, so I'd call him a worker. Don't get me wrong, I'm against somebody taking another workers' personal possesions, but insurance corporations who rob us all foot the bill for stuff like cheese from shops. Only victim was the villan, the insurance corporation.

TheCultofAbeLincoln
5th March 2010, 18:40
The three strikes law is pretty ridiculous, especiually considering that in many cases it's only in play if it's the same offense 3 times, such as burglary in this case. Had he beaten up his girlfriend he'd have gotten a much lighter sentence.

This also means that California, which is broke and hasn't given a tax refund in a while, is goinhg to have to pay to incarcerate a man for 7 years for non-violent offenses. A $3.99 block of cheese is going to cost CA $30k/year for 7 years (at least, $30k is the cost of incracerating a person for a year in TX on average in 2006).

chegitz guevara
5th March 2010, 20:29
I hope it was really good cheese.

Democrat
6th March 2010, 00:09
I believe that the problem isn't necessarily the punishment, but rather why the man did what he did, how it could be stopped [without taking rights away], and what will happen to the man. If you know all about the man, his reasons, and what will happen to him with whatever you do to him, then I'm sure that a reasonable punishment will be meeted out to him, although I'd much prefer the city/town decide since they probably know the man better than anyone else.

RedScare
6th March 2010, 02:18
19 years for a loaf of bread, it seems.

Robocommie
6th March 2010, 03:52
19 years for a loaf of bread, it seems.

Yeah we should sent this story to Andrew Lloyd Webber.

Crux
6th March 2010, 07:09
19 years for a loaf of bread, it seems.
Link?