A judge refused to send a drug offender
to prison, saying the man would be a target for sexual assault because
he is thin and white.
Instead, Hillsborough County Judge
Florence Foster placed Paul Hamill on two years probation and sent him
to a treatment center for violating probation on a previous cocaine conviction.
“He's a small, thin, white man with
curly dark hair, and I suspect he would certainly become a sexual target
in the Florida state prison system,'' Foster said, according to a transcript
of the November sentencing hearing.
“I've been told they can't protect
people like that. I'm not going to send a man like this to Florida state
prison. That is cruel and unusual punishment in my book,'' she said.
Prosecutors objected at the time
and have complained in the past that Foster imposes light sentences.
Foster would not discuss Hamill's
case specifically, but said her general goal is to “help people with drug
problems get rid of their drug problems.''
Her decision was praised by Bruce
Rogow, a law professor at Nova Southeastern University in Davie.
“I think it's a statement of great
sensitivity; she is probably trying to save this man's life,'' Rogow said.
But Susan Rush, a law professor
at the University of Florida in Gainesville, thinks Foster's statement
was inappropriate.
“That's a fairly racist comment,''
Rush said recently.
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