With the DEA… the ends justifies the lies ?

No More Drug War: Mother Crystal Munoz doing 19 years for DEA Set Up

http://www.ladybud.com/2015/04/14/mother-crystal-munoz-doing-19-years-for-dea-setup/

Marijuana users are frequently given the advice to never chat or “cooperate” with law enforcement, and there’s no better example of why not than Crystal Munoz, currently in her 7th year of incarceration on a 19 year, 10 month sentence.

Her nightmare began when DEA agents visited Munoz’s home. They assured the young mother of an infant daughter, who happened to be pregnant with her third child at the time, that she was not in any kind of trouble. The agents claimed they merely needed to speak with Crystal to get a few questions answered and details cleared up about an incident that had taken place 3 years earlier.

The activities in question involved a map that Crystal had drawn showing how to circumvent a drug checkpoint. She herself was never caught with any drugs. Her indictment and prosecution was based entirely on the testimony of the people who were actually caught trafficking the drugs 3 years earlier.

The government offered no plea deal. Crystal plead not guilty and took her case to trial.

Crystal_munoz-02

Because she had drawn the map, prosecutors painted Crystal as a leader in the conspiracy to distribute 1000 kilos or more of marijuana, a factor that played into her long sentence, along with two prior misdemeanors for possession on her record. Her original indictment included charges for cocaine, which prosecutors dropped the day of trial, as they had no proof of the allegation.

While the people who were actually doing the dealing received between 5 to 7 years each, Munoz, who only drew a map, received a sentence of 19 years and 10 months.

Even before incarceration Crystal had experienced great tragedy in her life. Her first child, a son, tragically choked to death while at school at the age of five.

crystal_munoz-family

Locking away the young wife and mother for the greater part of two decades has only added to the stress and hardship the entire family has endured. Crystal’s second daughter was born in prison. Her husband and mother struggle every day to keep the family going and care for the two young girls.

Nonetheless, Crystal Munoz has used her time behind bars to better herself, completing a yearlong Change program, an 18-month long Life Connection program, a 40- hour residential drug abuse program, and completed a course to become a personal fitness trainer. She has even worked as a hospice volunteer.

Crystal is grateful that so many of her family members have stepped up to help care for her children, but is always aware of the burden her incarceration has placed on them and she longs to be able to take an active role in her children’s lives as well as care for her aging parents and grandparents.

Crystal’s biggest hope is for executive clemency, as a Presidential pardon would allow her to return to her family and once again become a wife and mother, before her children are already grown.

 How you can help:

Write to Crystal:

Crystal Munoz #79319-180
FMC Carswell
PO BOX 27137
Fort Worth, TX 76127

Want to help more?

Here’s how to put money directly onto a prisoner’s books — no middle man, ALL of the money goes DIRECTLY to the prisoner – to be used for phone calls, email, legal expenses, food, personal hygiene items, etc.:

1. Send money directly through Western Union’s Send Money to a Prisoner link.

2. Send a postal money order (Must be a POSTAL money order or the Bureau of Prisons will not accept it):

Federal Bureau of Prisons*
Inmate Name, Inmate Register Number
(Crystal Munoz #79319-180)
PO Box 474701
Des Moines, Iowa 50947-0001

*Note: this is not the address to which you can write her, it is to process any payments through FBOP.

More about Crystal Munoz at Clemency for All Non-violent Drug Offenders (CAN-DO)

**

More Drug War Prisoners Who Deserve Clemency

**

FREE IRMA ALRED

Leave a Reply

Discover more from PHARMACIST STEVE

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading