Paula McMahon has
this lengthy article about the interesting twists and turns of this old case:
In his heyday, Robert Woodring was a con man who lived a life of
intrigue and adventure, then successfully went on the lam for 37 years
to avoid going to prison.
Law enforcement finally tracked him down
a year ago in Guadalajara, Mexico, and he was sent back to South
Florida to serve his time for the original offenses and to pay the price
for eluding justice.
But by Monday, when the 82-year-old Woodring was to be sentenced
for jumping bond in 1977, the ravages of time had created another twist:
He was recently diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and dementia and was found legally incompetent to be sentenced.
His medical diagnosis does not mean he will get a free pass from the legal system.
***
On Monday, U.S. District Judge Marcia Cooke met privately with
probation officials and then held a lengthy sidebar discussion with
Salnick and Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert T. Watson.
The judge
decided the most practical course of action was to send Woodring to a
federal prison hospital, where he can receive appropriate treatment. She
recommended sending him to Butner Federal Medical Center in North
Carolina.
For technical legal reasons, she gave him a provisional
sentence of one year in federal prison for the bond-jumping offense and
recommended the prior 7.5-year term, imposed by judges who are long
dead, also be converted to a provisional sentence because it is unlikely
Woodring would ever be restored to legal competency.
Woodring,
dressed in khaki prison scrubs and using a wheelchair, joked affably
with the deputy marshals who escorted him to the Miami courtroom from
the neighboring Federal Detention Center.
He did not speak during the hearing but was overheard talking with his lawyer, saying at one point: "Life is short."
Salnick said Judge Cooke's sentencing was "the very kind and very humane thing to do."
2 comments:
What a colossal waste of time, effort, and money.
Yes, a colossal waste of time, effort, and money. Thank you!
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