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Sentenced to 15 years for weed, a Missouri mom finally comes home

Dawn Huston.
Dawn Huston
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漏 2024 外网天堂
Sentenced to 15 years in prison for selling 5 ounces of marijuana, Dawn Huston was released in February through a clemency order from Gov. Mike Parson.

A repealed Missouri law that punished even nonviolent drug offenders with decadeslong prison sentences continues to keep people behind bars. Until recently, one was Dawn Huston, who was sentenced in 2014 to 15 years for selling a total of 5 ounces of marijuana to an undercover police officer.

At the time of her arrest, Huston鈥檚 criminal record included only one previous low-level drug conviction. In 2011, charging documents show she sold marijuana three times to an undercover police officer at her home in Marshall. Huston wasn鈥檛 handling kingpin-levels of narcotics. One purchase involved an exchange of $20 for four grams of weed.

At the time, Huston believed 鈥淚 was doing somebody a favor,鈥 she said on Thursday鈥檚 St. Louis on the Air. 鈥淚t just went downhill at that point.鈥

More than seven years passed. In January, Huston鈥檚 life took an upward turn when her sentence was commuted by an official act of clemency from Gov. Mike Parson. Around a week later, she walked out of Chillicothe Correctional Center.

Listen: A Missouri mom leaves prison, and a lawmaker tries again

Huston said she鈥檚 grateful for her freedom and making the most of it. 鈥淭hings couldn鈥檛 be better,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 blessed in so many ways. I found a job, reconnected with my family. My daughter is doing good. Just small blessings are starting to come my way.鈥

Much has changed since Huston鈥檚 conviction in 2014. Her 4-year-old daughter is now nearly a teenager. Five ounces of marijuana 鈥 the quantity that landed her in prison 鈥 would be, today, legal to possess or cultivate in Missouri with a medical card.

There have also been major changes to Missouri鈥檚 criminal laws. The same year Huston entered prison, a bipartisan coalition of state lawmakers passed a sweeping reform of Missouri鈥檚 criminal codes, reforming the statutes that define specific crimes and their associated range of punishments. Among the changes was a repeal of the 鈥淧rior and Persistent Drug Offender鈥 statute, a uniquely harsh sentencing law passed in 1989 that made repeat drug offenders 鈥 even nonviolent ones like Huston 鈥 subject to prison sentences ranging from ten years to life.

The law also made 鈥減rior and persistent鈥 offenders ineligible for parole. In the vast majority of cases, incarcerated people 鈥 even those convicted of violent crimes 鈥 are able to appear before a parole board after serving between 30% to 50% of their sentence. The board determines whether the person should be given early release, which would allow them to serve the rest of the sentence under supervised probation.

Huston never had that chance. Years into her sentence for a nonviolent marijujana crime, she said, she learned that she would never see a parole board, and that she would have to serve the entirety of her 15-year sentence. The news almost broke her.

鈥淚 couldn't understand how this could be happening,鈥 she recalled. 鈥淚 was just beside myself for a long time. But a lot of the women and staff there helped me, and I went to the law library every day to try to figure it out 鈥 because I had no clue. So I just learned on my own and kept trying to do clemencies.鈥

The law didn鈥檛 help Huston. In 2020, the Missouri Supreme Court ruled that the repeal of the 鈥減rior and persistent鈥 sentencing law only applied to future cases, not those already adjudicated in the past. Huston said she filed several applications for clemency.

Eventually, her pleas reached Gov. Mike Parson, who has taken a demonstrated interest in commuting the cases of long-term drug offenders still serving no-parole sentences as 鈥減rior and persistent鈥 offenders. His commutation for Huston on Jan. 31 was at least the 15th time the governor has used his clemency powers to free a drug offender.

Missouri State representative Cheri Toalson-Reisch.
Danny Wicentowski
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漏 2024 外网天堂
Inspired by a former drug offender, Hallsville Republican state Rep. Cheri Toalson-Reisch is working to change Missouri's drug sentencing laws.

Parson has issued new clemencies every month or so, but that rate is low compared to the backlog of thousands of clemency applications that accumulated over the past decade as previous administrations ignored cries for change. In 2021, the that Missouri prison data showed more than 200 cases of 鈥減rior and persistent鈥 drug offenders still serving outdated sentences without the possibility for parole. One case involves a man sentenced to life for manufacturing meth. .

There is a glimmer of hope for at least some of Missouri鈥檚 still-imprisoned 鈥減rior and persistent鈥 offenders. During 2021鈥檚 legislative session, state Rep. Cheri Toalson Reisch, a Republican from Hallsville, sponsored a bill with support and input from the Missouri Department of Corrections. The bill would have restored parole to 35 offenders convicted of drug trafficking who were still serving lengthy sentences under Missouri鈥檚 previous drug laws.

The proposal was later transformed into an amendment to a Senate bill. By the end of the legislative session, the Senate bill was voted through. It appeared that Reisch鈥檚 reform would become law.

However, in the frenzied editing and amending of the Senate bill before the final vote, when a legislative staff member wasn鈥檛 sure if the bill was properly written. The deletion amounted to 鈥渁 clerical error,鈥 Reisch said Thursday.

鈥淚 didn't even know because it was the very last day of session,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was just shocked and upset. I had gotten that bill passed unanimously through the House committees.鈥

On Feb. 24, Reisch refiled a new version of the bill, . After 2021鈥檚 near-success, she said she still believes there鈥檚 support to make things right for those prisoners trapped 鈥渋n the cracks鈥 between the state鈥檚 old drug laws and recent reforms.

That doesn鈥檛 mean an automatic release for everyone.

鈥淭hey will still have to go in front of the parole board, make sure they've been good citizens while incarcerated,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is a nonpartisan issue. It's not a Democrat or Republican. I think everyone is on board with this. Everybody sees [that] we want people to become productive members of society.鈥

鈥 brings you the stories of St. Louis and the people who live, work and create in our region. The show is hosted by and produced by , , and . Jane Mather-Glass is our production assistant. The audio engineer is .

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Danny Wicentowski is a producer for "St. Louis on the Air."