Almost three years after United States authorities
requested his extradition on drug and gunrunning charges, former Tivoli
Gardens strongman Christopher 'Dudus' Coke faces the final chapter in
the long-running saga, when he is sentenced there tomorrow.
The question on everybody's minds here is whether or not Judge Robert P
Patterson will impose the maximum 23-year sentence under the plea
bargain arrangement entered into between prosecutors and Coke's defence
team last August.
According to US Federal defence attorney Wayne
Golding gave an insight into how the sentencing could turn out. He said
that there is no way of knowing if Judge Patterson will impose the
maximum sentence, which is what is being sought by prosecutors.
According to Golding, the judge will examine a raft of issues — known in
legal circles as the book of factors — as part of the sentencing
guidelines.
Among these factors, Golding said, is a probation report which is only
available to prosecutors and Coke's defence team. He said that other
factors will include Coke's family history, education, cooperation, and
whether or not the plea bargain arrangement was done in a timely manner.
Golding said that the fact that Coke pleaded guilty to lesser charges
than for what he was originally charged, "will also be taken into
consideration by the judge". He said that he was confident that "Judge
Patterson will be fair in his sentencing".
While Coke, who has been in custody since June 2010 — could possible
benefit from time served, Golding said he will not be considered for
parole. Coke has had his sentencing postponed on three occasions since
December of last year.
Coke was extradited to the US after eluding the Jamaican security forces
for a month after escaping a dragnet in his former stronghold of Tivoli
Gardens, West Kingston.
More than 70 people died in a gun battle when police and soldiers forced
their way into a barricaded Tivoli Gardens to serve an arrest warrant
on Coke, the revered community leader in the tough inner-city community.
He was finally held in a police roadblock on the Mandela Highway in St
Catherine and later waived his rights to an extradition hearing.
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