Down and Out
A sampling of Project Exile convictions.
BY DAVID
HOLTHOUSE
Originally
Published here
by Westword
March 21, 2002
Reprinted with author's permission.
Thirty-six and a
half months per bullet.
That's what Joseph
R. Morrison got when he was sentenced March 1 to five years and three
months in federal prison for illegal possession of two .308-caliber rifle
rounds. The details of his case are as follows: On June 21, 2001, Morrison
contracted a nasty case of road rage on Highway 285 near Centerville.
During an altercation on the side of the highway, he put a homemade
"zip gun" to the scalp of another motorist and asked, rather
rhetorically, "Do you want me to blow your head off?"
The other man
flagged down a passing highway patrolman, who arrested Morrison and
searched his vehicle, finding a pair of bullets that fit the single-shot
zip gun.
Morrison had four
South Carolina felony convictions on his record -- two for domestic
violence, one for assault and battery, and one for malicious destruction
of property -- making him an ideal candidate for Project Exile
prosecution.
When an ATF agent
test-fired the zip gun -- which was made of threaded plumbing fittings,
with a spring for a hammer and a chopped piece of a key ring for a firing
pin -- it didn't work. That would normally have been a moot point, because
for a gun to fall under the jurisdiction of federal firearms laws, it
needs first to have been involved in interstate transport. And in 99
percent of Colorado
Exile cases, the firearms involved have, in fact, been manufactured in
other states or countries before finding their way to Colorado. But in
this situation, Morrison had made the gun himself.
So instead of
charging him with illegal possession of a firearm, Exile prosecutors
creatively employed a seldom-used provision of federal law that prohibits
felons from possessing ammunition. Morrison pleaded not guilty. A jury
convicted him earlier this year; he's scheduled for release in 2007.
Unusual as his case
may be, Morrison seems to represent exactly the kind of criminal a program
that targets gun violence would want to exile -- that is, a felon with a
documented history of violence, who comes to the attention of prosecutors
because he uses a gun to threaten or harm another person. As it turns out,
Morrison is an exception among Project Exile felons, most of whom are
caught in possession of a firearm not because they actually use it on
another person, but because they are bad drivers, or passengers in the
wrong car at the wrong time.
A sampling of
cases:
� On May 8, 1999,
Dale American Horse, a Bureau of Indian Affairs peace officer assigned to
the Ute Mountain Agency, was on a routine patrol of Rustling Willow Road
in Towaoc, Colorado, when he stopped a red pickup truck with expired tags.
The driver of the truck, Frank Johnson, appeared drunk, and there was a
marijuana pipe on his seat. Officer American Horse searched the truck and
found a .38-caliber revolver zippered inside a case under the driver's
seat, along with a box of shells. Johnson, now 51, had four previous
felonies on his record: breaking and entering (1982), burglary and escape
from jail (1987), and battery on a police officer (1996). Charged under
Project Exile as one of the program's first five cases, Johnson pleaded
guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm and was sentenced to 77
months in federal prison -- fourteen more than Joseph Morrison.
� In the early
hours of March 1, 2001, Richard Cruickshank, then 36, rolled his Ford
Expedition on West 90th Place in Westminster. As rescue workers pried
Cruickshank from his damaged SUV, a Westminster police officer saw a
.45-caliber pistol tumble from the waistband of the injured driver's
pants. The officer ran Cruickshank's name through a database and found
previous felony convictions for being a habitual traffic offender in 1991,
second-degree burglary in 1993, and possession of a controlled substance
in 1998. Cruickshank pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 55 months.
� Just after 6
a.m. on July 11, 2000, a Colorado Springs police officer manning a traffic
radar station on Highway 24 clocked a motorcycle driven by Jacob Lee
Sorenson at 88 miles per hour. Less than a minute later, Sorenson, then
25, failed to negotiate a turn and flew off the road. He survived, but
amid the scattered wreckage of his motorcycle, the officer found a Colt
.357 revolver. A check of Sorenson's criminal record revealed a 1996
felony conviction for menacing. Prosecuted under a Project Exile case, he
pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm and was
sentenced to 41 months.
� Also in July
2000, a Denver cop followed a gold Nissan Altima traveling at a high rate
of speed on Federal Boulevard near Tenth Avenue. When the officer turned
on his lights, he saw Adam Michael Bonillas, who was in the front
passenger seat, toss a marijuana joint out the window. A search of the car
turned up a .40-caliber semi-automatic pistol under the passenger seat.
Bonillas said the gun was his. He had served three years in state prison
for a 1996 conviction in Arizona for aggravated assault with a firearm.
Among the minority of Project Exile defendants with a proven history of
gun violence, Bonillas received a relatively light sentence of thirty
months.
� Floyd Zimmerman
wasn't so lucky. On May 9, 2000, he was pulled over by a Denver police
officer for failing to properly signal a turn onto 35th Avenue. When
Zimmerman failed to produce proof of insurance, the officer searched his
car and found a 9mm pistol under the front seat. Zimmerman's only felony
record was a 1997 conviction for possession of a controlled substance, yet
he was sentenced to forty months in federal prison.
� One of the
longest sentences handed down under Project Exile was that of Juan Carlos
Ovalle, who on November 25, 2000, was riding in the passenger seat of a
Cadillac observed making an illegal turn by an Aurora patrolman. As the
Caddy was being pulled over, the officer saw Ovalle toss a Tec-9 assault
pistol out the window. Ovalle, who had a 1996 conviction for conspiracy to
commit second-degree burglary on his record, chose to take his case to
trial. A jury convicted him, and he was sentenced to 84 months.
More Project Exile
cases have been brought against convicted felons for shooting into the air
than for shooting at other people. Here are three examples:
� On July 4,
2000, Colorado Springs resident Karriem Johnson celebrated Independence
Day the old-fashioned way: by smoking crack and shooting guns. Police
responding to a report of gunfire found Johnson in his back yard with a
crack pipe in one hand and a Smith & Wesson 9mm in the other. After
watching him launch a few rounds to the heavens, the officers moved in.
Johnson, then 23, was on probation at the time, having pleaded guilty to
possession of a controlled substance earlier that year. He also pleaded
guilty to his Project Exile charge. His sentence: 37 months.
� In January of
2001, Aurora Police Department officers checking out a citizen's complaint
of shots fired in his neighborhood heard the crackle of gunfire coming
from behind Scott Gabrill Hickman's house on Lima Street. There they found
Hickman, two juveniles and three handguns. Waiving his Miranda rights,
Hickman said the guns were his and that the juveniles "had only been
looking at them." He also informed the officers that he had a 1997
felony on his record for selling marijuana. Sentence: 55 months.
� In June that
year, a Denver officer saw Hugh Pacheco-Bello, then 33, standing at a bus
stop at the intersection of Park Avenue and Champa Street, alternately
waving a handgun at nothing in particular and shooting in the air.
Pacheco-Bello, a citizen of Mexico, had been convicted in El Paso of
possession of heroin in 1994. He pleaded guilty to Project Exile charges
and got 38 months.
A few Project Exile
defendants haven't been convicted felons, but illegal aliens. Two
examples:
� On August 25,
2000, Denver officers cruising the 2200 block of Arapahoe Street stopped
to question pedestrian Alfredo Lugo Martinez, then eighteen, who matched
the description of a robbery suspect. Though Martinez turned out to have
nothing to do with the robbery, according to a police report, he
"spontaneously told officers he was in possession of a .25-caliber
pistol." The officers ran his name and found that Martinez had been
deported three times in recent months after being caught crossing the
border in Texas. He was charged under Project Exile with possession of a
firearm by an illegal alien. Martinez pleaded guilty and was sentenced to
21 months.
Finally, apart from
moving violations and confidential informants, domestic disharmony has
been the cause of most Exile convictions:
� Early in the
afternoon of January 5, 2000, Denver Police Department officers responded
to a radio call concerning a fight outside a home on south Quitman Street.
At the scene, the officers found Chad Dean Sears and several other men
standing in the garage. No evidence of a fight was observed, but while the
officer was questioning the men, Sears's wife showed up, became angry, and
told the officer she was "tired of drugs and guns all over the
house." She gave the officer permission to search the home and
suggested that he break into a safe in the basement using tools she handed
him off a wall in the garage. Inside the safe, the officer found four
rifles, two handguns and two shotguns, along with "Internet-generated
information on how to synthesize narcotics." Sears had been convicted
in 1999 of possessing methamphetamine. He pleaded guilty to a Project
Exile charge of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and was
sentenced to 41 months.
� On June 11,
2000, Denver cops were dispatched to a house in the 4600 block of Clay
Street on a domestic-violence call. In front of the house, they contacted
Robert John Roybal, then 25, and his girlfriend, who said Roybal wouldn't
let her leave and was threatening to kill himself with a gun. Police went
in and found a Mak90 Sporter rifle in Roybal's bedroom. Roybal pleaded not
guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm, but a jury convicted
him, and he was sentenced to 63 months. According to police reports, when
he saw the officers coming out of the house with the rifle, Roybal told
his girlfriend, "You know I only have that for protection from the
UTAs [the Untouchables, a Denver street gang]. I'm on parole for drugs,
and I only have six more months to go. Now I'm going down."
Related Reading:
Project Exile Archives
Project Exile Condemnation
Coalition