Hawaii Substance Abuse News
Drug appeal fails on definition of playground in Hawaii
A Honolulu, Hawaii man arrested in 1999 during a "Weed & Seed"
anti-drug sting in Aala Park, Hawaii lost an appeal yesterday that challenged
his being sentenced to a longer prison term just because the crime took place
within 1,000 feet of a playground in Hawaii.
Iupeli Migi, 49, was one of six people arrested during a Hawaii Memorial Day
drug bust who were prosecuted in federal court as part of a coordinated program
targeting high-crime areas.
Migi was convicted of six counts of possessing or distributing crack cocaine
within 1,000 feet of a playground, subjecting him to twice the maximum term
for a federal drug conviction. He was given seven years and 11 months.
Before his arrest on federal drug charges, Migi was convicted in Hawaii state
court of assault and drug offenses that occurred within the Downtown-Chinatown
area, which is part of the "Weed & Seed" district.
His attorney, Georgia McMillen, challenged U.S. District Judge David Ezra's
ruling that Aala Park, Hawaii qualified as a playground.
She argued that the federal law's definition of a playground as containing
at least three apparatus intended for the use of children did not apply to Aala
Park because its only apparatus was a swingset.
Ezra had ruled that basketball courts, softball fields and skating rinks also
qualified as apparatus under the federal law, meaning Aala Park was a playground.
The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with Ezra
yesterday.
While Congress did not distinguish between apparatus designed for play and
that for sports, "we find no legal difference between sliding boards, swingsets
and teeterboards and basketball courts, softball fields and skating rinks,"
the appeals court ruled.
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