Embattled Dancehall/Reggae superstar, Mark Myrie, more popularly known as Buju Banton may
have a lifeline after all following the revelation on Tuesday that an
alleged United States government mishap could trigger the dismissal of
his case.
According to media reports, Buju Banton could walk
free from his conviction and subsequent ten year sentence on
drug-related charges after the discovery that the U.S. government may
have violated the Speedy Trial Act. The act states that
any defendant involved in a case must be brought to trial by the
government within a 70 day window; a right guaranteed under the Sixth
Amendment in the American constitution. Additionally, said right is
generally afforded to defendants so that they not subjected to
unreasonably lengthy incarceration prior to a fair trial.
Buju Banton’s first trial took place in September 2010, nine months
after his initial arrest by law enforcement officials in Florida and
four months after Judge James Moody pushed back Buju’s initial court
date without giving any specifics regarding why the case was postponed.
His second trial, where he was later convicted, took place in February
of this year, four months after he was granted bail in the case.
The U.S Supreme Court has developed a four part test considering
length of the delay, the reasons for the delay, the defendant's
assertion of his right to a speedy trial, and the prejudice to the
defendant in judging speedy trial claims. Any violations of the Speedy
Trial Act could spark the dismissal of a criminal case given the state’s
inability to bring the case to trial within a reasonable amount of
time.
Buju Banton’s legal team filed an appeal last week in a Georgia
appeals court, citing violation of said act whilst intimating that the
prominent Reggae singjay was not a willing participant in any drug
conspiracy.
Buju Banton was sentenced to ten years in prison this past February
on three drug-related charges stemming from a December 2009 incident
where he allegedly conspired to organize a drug deal within a police
controlled warehouse.
di man no guilty frm day one and nw it a prove out. bap bap.
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