by willychichi » Fri Oct 30, 2015 4:20 am
By George Anastasia
For Bigtrial.net
Earlier this month, George Martorano was released from a prison.
It was long overdue.
Martorano, 65, had spent 32 years in federal institutions. Jailed in 1983, he pleaded guilty a year later to drug dealing charges, admitting that he ran a multi-million dollar narcotics ring that dealt in cocaine, heroin and marijuana. It was his first offense. Yet the judge -- the late John B. Hannum -- sentenced him to life.
On the face of it, it hardly seemed logical or fair. It was the maximum sentence. Martorano could have gone to trial, gotten convicted and would have faced no harsher punishment. Where was the benefit in pleading out? Usually that factors in to the sentencing process. You take a plea, you catch a break.
Conventional wisdom at the time was that Martorano -- nicknamed "Cowboy George" and the son of mobster Raymond "Long John" Martorano -- was looking at a 10-year max. If he got lucky, maybe less.
Instead, the judge dropped the hammer.
Why Hannum chose to go in that direction is part of a bigger, more complicated story that literally changed the face of the Philadelphia mob.
Read more at
http://www.bigtrial.net/2015/10/george- ... QOUUbB7.99
By George Anastasia
For Bigtrial.net
Earlier this month, George Martorano was released from a prison.
It was long overdue.
Martorano, 65, had spent 32 years in federal institutions. Jailed in 1983, he pleaded guilty a year later to drug dealing charges, admitting that he ran a multi-million dollar narcotics ring that dealt in cocaine, heroin and marijuana. It was his first offense. Yet the judge -- the late John B. Hannum -- sentenced him to life.
On the face of it, it hardly seemed logical or fair. It was the maximum sentence. Martorano could have gone to trial, gotten convicted and would have faced no harsher punishment. Where was the benefit in pleading out? Usually that factors in to the sentencing process. You take a plea, you catch a break.
Conventional wisdom at the time was that Martorano -- nicknamed "Cowboy George" and the son of mobster Raymond "Long John" Martorano -- was looking at a 10-year max. If he got lucky, maybe less.
Instead, the judge dropped the hammer.
Why Hannum chose to go in that direction is part of a bigger, more complicated story that literally changed the face of the Philadelphia mob.
Read more at http://www.bigtrial.net/2015/10/george-martorano-and-case-that-changed.html#cXA3olE5wQOUUbB7.99