A judge has postponed consideration of a request to release a cocaine dealer from prison because of a cancer diagnosis so the inmate can appear in court.
In Cass Superior Court II on Monday, Jay Hirschauer, the attorney for 59-year-old James Cripe, asked Judge Rick Maughmer to release his client from the Miami Correctional Facility because Cripe has been diagnosed with cancer in his mouth and throat since receiving a six-year prison term last year.
The cancer required surgery, which took place in an Indianapolis hospital in July. Hirschauer said Cripe’s recovery in prison had been difficult. He wanted the judge to modify Cripe’s sentence and release him onto in-home detention so the decorated Vietnam War veteran could receive proper treatment by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
Hirschauer said his client used alcohol and cocaine to deal with the psychological problems of war. He called the motion a “humanitarian request.”
Cass County Prosecutor Kevin Enyeart referenced his disgust with the recent prison release of Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, the Libyan convicted of killing 270 people in the 1988 airline bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. Last week, Megrahi was returned to his home country to die of prostate cancer.
Enyeart acknowledged that Cripe’s crime of dealing cocaine is serious but he said it was nowhere near as heinous as the act committed by Megrahi.
Cripe was arrested on July 27, 2006, during Bought & Paid For, a series of drug raids that led to the arrests of 41 suspects in a single day. He was charged with two class A felony counts of dealing in cocaine, which each carrying a sentencing range of 20 to 50 years in prison, but he pleaded guilty in exchange for a reduction in the possible penalties.
In October, Maughmer sentenced Cripe to six years in the Indiana Department of Correction and four years on probation.
Before agreeing to a sentence modification, Enyeart wanted to hear from Cripe, not just his two daughters, who testified that their father was not eating properly and losing weight. They fear the cancer will come back, and he will die in prison. The daughters offered to help care for their father and pay the $13 a day for in-home detention.
Maughmer did not have Cripe transported from the prison in Bunker Hill for Monday’s hearing, but agreed he would sign the transport order for a hearing at 2 p.m. on Oct. 26.
• Kevin Lilly is news editor of the Pharos-Tribune. He can be reached at (574) 732-5117 or kevin.lilly@pharostribune.com
Local News
Ill drug dealer asks for release
Attorney’s attempt postponed until prisoner transported to court.
- Local News
-
-
County ambulance talks continue
Cass County officials met with another private firm last week as they explore which way to go with the county’s obligation to provide ambulance service.
-
City to consider reducing tipping fee
Logansport City Council members plans to discuss decreasing the amount the city receives in tipping fees from Oak Ridge Recycling and Disposal Facility at a special meeting tonight.
-
Caston officials discussing $2 million in capital projects
Caston School Corp. officials are eyeing a new bus barn and parking lots as they consider spending about $2 million on capital projects.
-
The state option: Local educators unsure of impacts of ‘No Child’ waiver
Indiana last week received a waiver from the federal No Child Left Behind act, but local superintendents say the move may just swap one rigid set of guidelines for another without addressing educators’ frustrations.
-
Filings in: Three Republican primaries
Cass County Republicans will cast ballots in three races in the May 8 primary, while Democrats will vote on who to send to the state convention.
-
Logansport officials: Wireless plan not dead
Logansport City Council members last week nixed funding of a $850,000 wireless project approved late last year, but officials say the project is not completely off the radar.
-
Miami County officials say they knew of company’s past issues
Reports that a Texas-based company owed more than $500,000 in back taxes, was behind on its rent and had an executive indicted surfaced about a year before corporate leaders began discussing an expansion to Miami County.
-
Dean Baldwin’s past includes tax payment problems, indictment of executive
An aircraft service provider expanding to Miami County had a blur of bad publicity a few years before announcing its plans to come to the area.
-
Principal: Lewis Cass student attacked with piece of wood
A Lewis Cass Junior-Senior High School freshman remained hospitalized Friday after being attacked by a classmate with a piece of wood, the school’s principal said.
-
Dancing with dad: 185 fathers and daughters take to dance floor
Robert Kesling remembers eight years ago when he swooped his daughter Anna off her feet and swayed on the dance floor with the young lady that makes his heart melt.
- More Local News Headlines
-
County ambulance talks continue








