Drug Dealer Sentenced To 20 Years For Murder After Customer's Fatal Overdose

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A Rhode Island man was sentenced to at least 20 years in prison Wednesday after pleading no contest to second-degree murder for providing fentanyl to a woman who later fatally overdosed on the drug.

In February 2014, Aaron Andrade, 25, sold Kristen Coutu, 29, $40 worth of “Diesel,” a street name for heroin cut with an adulterant. Hours later, police found Coutu dead in her mother’s car.

Through cell phone records and text messages, authorities were able to determine that Andrade was the source of the fatal dose of “pure fentanyl,” according to the Rhode Island attorney general’s office. Andrade later admitted to selling Coutu the synthetic opioid, which can be up to 50 times stronger than heroin.

Andrade initially pleaded not guilty to the subsequent murder charge, but reached a plea agreement with prosecutors this week. Under the terms of the plea, he was sentenced to 40 years in prison, with 20 years to serve and the remainder suspended with probation. The state also dropped related drug charges against Andrade.

As the opioid epidemic rages around the U.S., with more than 20,000 overdose deaths attributed to heroin and fentanyl nationwide in 2015, some prosecutors and lawmakers have begun seeking more severe penalties for street-level dealers. Andrade’s murder conviction marked a first for a dealer in an overdose case in the state.

“This is the first time in Rhode Island that somebody who has been charged with and pleaded to murder for selling drugs that led to the fatal overdose of another individual,” Amy Kempe, a spokesperson for the Rhode Island attorney general’s office, told The Huffington Post.

Andrade was subject to murder charges because he had caused the death of a person through the felony distribution of a controlled substance, Kempe explained. Rhode Island has broader murder statutes than many other states. While first-degree murder typically involves killing with malice or intent, second-degree murder may not.

In the courtroom Wednesday, Superior Court Judge Kristin Rodgers said Andrade’s case should serve as a warning to anyone involved in the drug trade in Rhode Island.

“It should send a message to drug dealers,” she said of Andrade’s sentence, according to the Providence Journal.

 

This sort of ‘tough on crime’ approach is ineffective and it hasn’t worked over the last 40 years.
Art Way, senior director at the Drug Policy Alliance

The growing severity of prosecutions for dealers has sparked a heated debate around the country, as policymakers in some states work to make it easier for authorities to seek murder charges for overdose deaths. But some critics argue that such an enforcement-focused strategy will only increase opioid-related deaths, while failing to address underlying issues of drug dependency and addiction.

When a drug user overdoses on an opioid like heroin or fentanyl, quick treatment is the best way to prevent death. The line between dealers and users is often blurred in these situations, and the threat of murder charges may make people less likely to call for help.

“This sort of ‘tough on crime’ approach is ineffective and it hasn’t worked over the last 40 years,” said Art Way, senior director for national criminal justice reform strategy at Drug Policy Alliance, a nonprofit that advocates for the progressive reform of drug laws.

“But people still engage in it because it provides a sort of pat on the back for the judge and the prosecutors to claim they’re doing something about the problem, but in essence they’re only making the problem worse,” added Way.

Research has also shown that targeting dealers with more severe punishment does not actually reduce drug use or supply.

“The supply chain for controlled substances is not ameliorated because a single seller is incarcerated, whether for drug-induced homicide or otherwise,” reads a 2016 report published by the Drug Policy Alliance. “Supply follows demand; not the other way around.”

Additional studies have found that locking up individual drug dealers simply results in a “replacement effect,” in which newcomers fill the absent dealer’s void. The main effect of imprisoning dealers “is merely to open the market for another seller,” one report highlighted.

Coutu’s mother, Sue Coutu, delivered an emotional statement on Wednesday, explaining that her daughter began using opioids while dating a veteran who used the drugs to cope with his post-traumatic stress disorder.

Coutu later developed her own struggles with addiction and bipolar disorder, and had been discharged from a treatment facility days before her death, because her insurance would not pay for coverage past 30 days.

“She was always so afraid she wouldn’t have a future,” Coutu’s mother told the court.

Andrade also expressed remorse for selling the drugs to Coutu.

“The actions that I did that day, I never meant to hurt nobody,” he said.

He then apologized to Sue Coutu and his own mother.

“I just want to say sorry for both of them,” said Andrade.

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Detroit Doctor Charged With Female Genital Mutilation

A Detroit doctor was charged in federal court on Wednesday with performing female genital mutilation on minor girls, in what may be the first case of its kind in the United States. 

Jumana Nagarwala, a 44-year-old emergency room physician from Northville, Michigan, was arrested Wednesday night after an FBI investigation uncovered that she allegedly removed clitoral skin from two 7-year-old girls at a medical office earlier this year. 

David Ashenfelter, a public information officer for the U.S. District Court for Eastern Michigan, told The Huffington Post that Nagarwala appeared in court on Thursday, where the judge advised her of her rights. No plea has been entered at this point. The physician is being temporarily held in jail until her next court date on Monday, when a judge will decide whether she should continue to be held in prison while awaiting trial.

Nagarwala is being represented by Shannon Smith, a Bloomfield Hills-based attorney who specialized in defending allegations of criminal sexual conduct. 

The Huffington Post requested comment from Smith, but has not heard back. 

Female genital mutilation includes procedures that intentionally alter or cause injury to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons. 

Although it is mistakenly linked to religion, FGM is a cultural custom that predates both Christianity and Islam. It is practiced by some members of the Muslim, Christian, Jewish, and other faiths, according to Human Rights Watch.  

Today, it is recognized by the The United Nations Population Fund and The World Health Organization as a violation of the human rights of girls and women. The practice is considered a criminal sexual act in the United States. 

A criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Detroit revealed that the young girls were allegedly brought from Minnesota to Livonia, Michigan, for the procedure.

One of the young victims told a child forensic interviewer that she thought she was going on a “special girls’ trip” to Michigan. Once she got there, she and the second victim were allegedly told they had to go to the doctor because “our tummies hurt.” She was able to identify an unmarked photo of Nagarwala as the person who “pinched” her on the “place [where] she goes pee” in order to “to get the germs out” of her. She was given a pad to wear in her underwear, and told not to talk about the procedure.

The 7-year-old girl was able to identify an unmarked photo of Nagarwala as the person who “pinched” her on the “place [where] she goes pee” in order to “to get the germs out” of her, she was told. She was given a pad to wear in her underwear and told not to talk about the procedure. 

The second victim, who also spoke to a child forensic interviewer, told investigators that she could barely walk after getting a “shot” on what she believed was her upper right thigh, according to the complaint. The second victim’s parents told her not to speak about the incident. 

The Department of Justice has not offered an explanation for possible motives on the part of Nagarwala or the children’s parents.

The criminal complaint reports that both victims were examined by a medical doctor on April 11, and their genitals were found to be abnormal in appearance.

The parents of the second victim admitted to Minnesota Child Protective Services that they had taken their child to Detroit to see Nagarwala for a “cleansing” of extra skin.

The investigators allege that other children may have been victimized by Nagarwala between 2005 and 2007. 

In a press release, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said it believes this is the “first case brought under 18 U.S.C. 116, which criminalizes FGM.” It is a crime that is punishable by up to five years in prison.

Nagarwala is also being charged with transportation with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity, which is a 10 year felony, Detroit News reports.

“Despite her oath to care for her patients, Dr. Nagarwala is alleged to have performed horrifying acts of brutality on the most vulnerable victims,” Acting Assistant Attorney General Blanco said in a statement. “The Department of Justice is committed to stopping female genital mutilation in this country, and will use the full power of the law to ensure that no girls suffer such physical and emotional abuse.” 

It’s unclear how many women and girls in the United States have actually been forced to undergo FGM.  A study conducted by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the number at risk of the procedure has tripled over the last 25 years. 

Nagarwala is listed as board certified emergency medicine doctor on the website of the Henry Ford Health System, a not-for-profit health corporation that runs hospitals and medical centers in and around Detroit. A Henry Ford spokesman told Detroit News that Nagarwala has been placed on administrative leave.

“The alleged criminal activity did not occur at any Henry Ford facility,” health system spokesman David Olejarz. “We would never support or condone anything related to this practice.”

On April 10, Nagarwala voluntarily agreed to be interviewed by authorities. According to the criminal complaint, she stated that she is aware that FGM is illegal in the United States and claimed she had never performed FGM on minor children.

Acting United States Attorney Daniel Lemisch called FGM a “particularly brutal form of violence against women and girls.”

“The practice has no place in modern society and those who perform FGM on minors will be held accountable under federal law,” he said in a statement. 

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Jennifer Hudson Says Her New Netflix Comedy Reflects Her Real-Life Career

Jennifer Hudson says her love for Whitney Houston’s “The Bodyguard” was a factor in agreeing to her latest film, “Sandy Wexler.”

The ‘90s-themed Netflix original film ― directed by and starring Adam Sandler, along with Terry Crews, Lamorne Morris, Nick Swardson, Rob Schneider, Jane Seymour and Hudson ― follows hapless Hollywood talent manager Sandy Wexler (played by Sandler) as his work-life balance is tested when he sparks a romance with his client and aspiring singer Courtney Clarke (played by Hudson).

The film marks Hudson’s debut in a comedy film, and she told The Huffington Post that starring alongside Sandler was one of her best career experiences. 

“I’ve always wanted to do a comedy. And so, when I got that call from Adam to come meet with him to talk about me playing Courtney, I was like, ‘Oh, my God. Of course I would want to do this,’” Hudson said.

“Then he said, ‘It’s like a comedic version of “The Bodyguard,”’ and right there I was sold,” she continued. “Like, ‘OK, that’s one of my absolute favorite films with one of my absolute favorite artists, which is Whitney.’ And so I was all in, and it was one of the absolute best experiences I’ve ever had on a project.”

From her humble beginnings performing on a Disney cruise ship, the Chicago native rose to fame in 2004 as a finalist on “American Idol.” Hudson would go on to earn chart-topping success as a recording artist and score an Oscar win for her breakout role in the 2006 motion picture adaptation of “Dreamgirls.”

Hudson said that her “Sandy Wexler” character’s dream of attaining success in entertainment is similar to her own journey of breaking into the industry.

“For me, it was just finding a way into it,” she recalled. “I remember sitting back like, ‘This is what I wanna do, but how? There’s no formula, there’s no shortcut, there’s no strategy.’ And the only thing I could do is say, keep singing and hopefully my talent makes room for me.”

“And thankfully it did,” she continued. “But there is no certain formula for it, so it’s hard to crack that code and say, ‘OK, this is what I’m gonna do and then this is what’s gonna happen.’”

With a comedy now on her growing acting resume, Hudson has her eyes set on other career interests, including a role in a silent film. She also would like to get into directing, which was inspired by working with Sandler. 

“That’s what I loved about this project, I felt more like I was not just an actor,” she said. “[Adam] would say, ‘Put your influence in there and approach it more like a partner, more so than you’re an actor. Do this.’ So it forced me and taught me how to be able to walk into those directing shoes one day.”

“Sandy Wexler” hits Netflix on April 14.

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This Earth Day, You Can Adopt A Piece Of The Planet

Planning anything special for this year’s Earth Day? Here’s something pretty extraordinary to do: Adopt a piece of our planet. NASA wants to help you do it.

This is no joke. The space agency is putting Earth up for adoption ― 64,000 pieces of it. All you do is type your name into the site, click the ADOPT! button, and your certificate is instantly generated.

According to NASA’s “Adopt The Planet” site, here’s what you’ll get in return:

Adopt a piece of Earth as seen from space. Your personalized adoption certificate will feature data from NASA’s Earth-observing satellites for a randomly assigned location. Print it and share it, then explore other locations with our interactive map and get even more Earth science data from NASA’s Worldview website.

Your little slice of Earth ― an average of 55 miles wide ― will show you the local air quality, vegetation and other relevant environmental information. You can print and share your NASA certificate on social media.

You don’t even have to wait until April 22 ― Earth Day ― to adopt your piece of the planet. NASA is rolling out the adoption certificates right now. 

Here’s an example of one:

Keep in mind, especially if you have a hankering for acquiring interesting pieces of real estate, you won’t actually own the 55-mile piece of Earth property, and there aren’t any legal or ownership rights to this program, so don’t get any ideas of putting up a “For Sale” sign.

This is all about making as many people as possible keenly aware of what’s going on in their 55-mile-wide piece of acreage and sharing the information with whoever they wish, as reported by Detroit ABC News affiliate WXYZ-TV below.

Gizmodo speculates that NASA may quietly hope that extraterrestrials will want to get in on the act and adopt Earth all for themselves. So, HuffPost contacted NASA to see if they have any alien agenda for Earth Day.

“With this year’s Adopt The Planet Earth Day activity, we’re really focused on terrestrial adopters and sharing with our fellow inhabitants some of the wealth of NASA data we have freely available about our great Blue Marble,” Stephen E. Cole, of NASA’s Earth Science Communications, told HuffPost.

“We’ll cross the bridge to opening this up to extraterrestrials (with good internet connections) down the road once some of our projects searching for life in the cosmos bear fruit,” he said. 

To further impress upon earthlings how incredible our world is, on April 26, NASA plans to present the first live-stream views in 4K Ultra HD of Earth from space, reports Variety.

The live feed, co-produced with Amazon Web Services, will originate 250 miles above Earth and offer viewers never-before-seen visual resolution of Earth.

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