Efforts by dancehall superstar Buju Banton to get an early release from prison based on amendments to drug sentencing guidelines implemented recently, may be thwarted because the deejay has maintained his innocence since being arrested.
Banton has asked that the court reduce his sentence and turn him over to immigration authorities so he can be deported back to Jamaica.
According to www.tbo.com, he filed his own motion from prison asking to be released early under a recent change in federal drug sentencing guidelines, which the US Sentencing Commission decided would be applied retroactively to inmates.
The federal probation office in the Middle District of Florida has identified 1,748 inmates originally sentenced in Tampa on drug charges, as potentially eligible to benefit from the change, known as Drugs Minus 2.
Those defendants will not be eligible for release until November 1, 2015.
In his motion, Banton argues he should be sentenced to 92 months in prison under the new guidelines. He said he has been “working in prison since his incarceration” and has “very good conduct” behind bars.
Our news team understands also that although more than 1,700 drug defendants sentenced in Tampa Federal Court have been identified as potential beneficiaries of a recent rollback in federal sentencing guidelines, the change won’t apply to most of those serving minimum mandatory sentences under the law.
Banton, born Mark Myrie, is serving 10 years, the minimum mandatory sentence for his conviction on a charge of conspiracy to distribute cocaine.
The only ways to get around the minimum mandatory sentences would require defendants to cooperate with investigators or at least give a full confession to their crimes.
Banton, who has steadfastly maintained his innocence, is unlikely to meet that requirement.