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Title: Georgia man grows pot. Admits it. Jury sends him home
Source: WSB-TV Atlanta 2
URL Source: https://www.wsbtv.com/news/local/ge ... -jury-sends-him-home/799784904
Published: Jul 27, 2018
Author: Bill Torpy for the AJC
Post Date: 2018-07-27 16:13:24 by Hondo68
Keywords: Jury Nulification, respect for the law, this was about fairness
Views: 7244
Comments: 64

Jury sends man home after he admits to growing pot.

DUBLIN, Georgia - This article was written by Bill Torpy for our investigative partners at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and AJC.com

Javonnie McCoy was growing marijuana when the cops came to his middle Georgia home. He was caught red-handed with it. Almost a pound of it, in fact.

He admitted it to police, and later he looked jurors in the eye and said, "Yep, it was mine. I used it as medicine."

The jurors let him go. He was minding his own business and wasn’t hurting anybody, they reasoned. He just doesn’t belong in prison.

The jury’s decision earlier this month in Dublin, Georgia, may have been due to a muddled prosecution of a muddy case.

Or it may have been jury nullification, another case of citizens saying prosecutions for pot are not worth law enforcement agencies' time and effort -- or the impact on otherwise law-abiding people’s lives.

It was the second such win in the Laurens County circuit for Atlanta attorney Catherine Bernard, a conservative Republican who’s also a staunch civil libertarian.

Late last year, another client of hers fessed up to a jury that he had sold a couple of nickel bags to an insistent undercover drug cop. That client was cut loose after just 18 minutes of deliberation.

And this is no liberal soft-on-crime region. Donald Trump won the county 2-1.

Bernard also helped get North Georgia authorities to drop charges against the parents of a 15-year-old whose parents allowed him to smoke pot to help combat severe seizures.

Ultimately, what may have kept McCoy out of an orange jumpsuit was that his lawyer urged the jury to empower themselves.

She told them they are not potted plants or an unthinking arm of government. They, in fact, are the government. She read to the jury a section from the Georgia Constitution that says, “The jury shall be the judges of the law and the facts.”

Bernard said the judge chided her for bringing that up, but it seems the words sank in.

The case started when police were called to McCoy’s mobile home four years ago. McCoy’s half-brother had allegedly attacked him with a stick and McCoy grabbed his .22-caliber rifle, the one he uses to hunt squirrels, and shot his sibling in the shoulder.

Police found several potted plants in McCoy’s bedroom and tagged him with several charges including aggravated assault and manufacturing marijuana, a felony that can bring 10 years.

The case stalled in the system and McCoy decided to go to trial. Right before the trial, the state dropped the assault accusation but kept the pot felony charge. (Prosecutors did not respond to my messages.)

McCoy was offered eight years’ probation, Bernard says, but chose to fight the case.

During trial, McCoy decided to testify. He had little choice. He was caught red-handed. He said his attorney told him, “Talk to them. They will connect with you.”

He gulped and sat in the witness box, telling jurors that 15 years ago he was mugged and beaten into a coma. He has suffered migraines and depression and ended up self-medicating with pot “because Zoloft turned me into a zombie.”

Prosecutors “tried to make it look so bad, that I was selling it. But I had nothing to hide,” McCoy told me, explaining his decision to testify. “The jurors had their eyes on me. I had my eyes on them.”

“Marijuana makes you eat,” McCoy told the jury. “It made me feel calm. It made me relax. It helps with my pain.”

He is a country guy who lives by “hustling” -- painting, landscaping, selling fish, driving people to the store.

Ultimately, he said, “We had a jury you could relate to. Truck drivers, mechanics, construction. People who worked. They saw I wasn’t bothering nobody. That’s what I believe they felt.”

Bernard said she doesn’t coach defendants before testifying because juries pick up on that. “I think they appreciated his honesty.”

People in Dublin have respect for the law, Bernard said. But this was about fairness, about properly using law enforcement resources.

“In America we leave someone alone if they are not bothering somebody,” Bernard said. “A world where he needs to be dragged away by armed men and put in a cage is not a world where people want to live.”

She doesn’t like the term jury nullification. “It brings up a negative image. It’s simply part of being a jury. The jury judges the law and the facts.”

Denise de La Rue, a jury consultant not involved in this case, said, “Jurors are really interested in justice. There are often cases of no loss, no foul. There’s no real victim here.”

That’s pretty much what the jurors said.

A couple said the case presented to them by prosecutors was a mess because the lawyers had to avoid talking about the shooting. In fact, the jurors I spoke with never even knew the missing charge involved a shooting.

Two of them said “second chances” also played heavily into their verdict.

Lizzie Mae Davis said, “He was believable. He wasn’t trying to make money. He had it to ease his health.”

Davis said she really has no problem with people using pot — “as long as they’re not around me.”

Juror Brian Loyd said of the verdict, “Sometimes good things happen to good people.”

Kenneth Thompson, who works in construction, said jurors liked that McCoy was “forthright.”

Ultimately, they decided, the man didn’t deserve to get tossed into the slammer.

“If he’s disrupting the peace and dignity of the state, well, a lot of us said he wasn’t bothering anybody,” Thompson said.


Poster Comment:

Libertarians are winning in Georgia. A waste of taxpayer dollars paying cops to bust people for victimless crimes. Fire them, give out tax rebates, and a tax cut too. (1 image)

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 17.

#3. To: hondo68 (#0)

She read to the jury a section from the Georgia Constitution that says, “The jury shall be the judges of the law and the facts.”

Bernard said the judge chided her for bringing that up, but it seems the words sank in.

So his lawyer told them about jury nullification and got away with it. She's lucky I'm not that judge.

misterwhite  posted on  2018-07-27   18:35:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: misterwhite (#3)

Yeah America is lucky you aren't in charge of anything. John Jay said it is the jurors duty to judge law and fact. Since you don't know much about the constitution. I'm pretty sure you never heard of John Jay.

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-07-28   7:34:56 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: A K A Stone (#11)

Is jury nullification good or bad?

Mark Pull man said:

The debate over jury nullification highlights the differences between libertarians, some of whom are “minarchists” uneasy with the constraints on individual autonomy inherent in the state, and classical liberals, who view civil society as indispensable to secure their liberty. Fundamentally, laws are necessary to preserve a free society, not—as libertarians suppose—inherently symbols of abject coercion. Freedom is not possible without the rule of law. Conceptually, jury nullification— selectively suspending the law—is “anarchy in a microcosm.” As a classical liberal, I view it as brazen lawlessness and a prescription for arbitrariness.
What say you?

Gatlin  posted on  2018-07-28   8:39:15 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: Gatlin (#13)

Freedom is not possible without the rule of law.

I also know that statement is pure bullshit.

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-07-28   8:52:37 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: A K A Stone (#15) (Edited)

Gatlin~ Freedom is not possible without the rule of law.

Stone ~ I also know that statement is pure bullshit.

I must agree with Gatlin on that. IMHO, there can be no situation for 100% freedom unless you live alone on an uncharted island. Just face the facts... with laws, regulations and ordinances does come with limitations of freedoms. Without them, your peers will remove a portion of your freedoms by victimizing you. So... as I’ve tried to say (a million times in the past, on two forums)... either your government reduces your freedoms a small percentage to create a system that holds your peers accountable for removing your freedoms through victimization, or you live freedomless in an anarchy.

You could look for that uncharted island... no laws. No victimization.

Stone, we are a nation of laws. Your forefathers intended it to be that way. What you should fight against are laws, regulations or ordnance’s that are crafted for anything else but reducing victimization or creating a system to hold people accountable for victimizing others. Like seatbelt laws, helmet laws... and so on.

The effects of illegal narcotic drug addiction victimizes everyone. When we get to a point where we don’t NARCAN, when we don’t treat any ailment caused by illegal drug use... when we stop giving addicts welfare and we spend zero dollars on incarceration of drug addicts via executions... then I’ll support legal meth vending machines on every corner.

I’m not talking weed, for that’s no worse than booze... but until weed laws are changed, the populace needs to obey those laws OR MOVE where it’s legal.

GrandIsland  posted on  2018-07-28   9:26:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 17.

#18. To: GrandIsland (#17)

I must agree with Gatlin on that.

You would agree with tater even if he asked you to become a member of al qaeda. BFD.

buckeroo  posted on  2018-07-28 09:32:16 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#49. To: GrandIsland (#17)

The Indians were free and had no laws. So we're the mountain men.

A K A Stone  posted on  2018-07-28 13:47:34 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 17.

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