Kansas Governor Frees First-Time Marijuana Offender Sentenced To More Than Seven Years In Prison
- Deshaun Durham, a young man in Kansas, was sentenced to over seven years in prison for a first-time marijuana offense.
- Despite the denial of his clemency application by the Prison Review Board, Kansas Governor Laura Kelly commuted Durham's sentence and he was released from prison after two and a half years.
- Durham's mother advocated for his release, joined by the Last Prisoner Project in seeking clemency for him.
- Durham believes that marijuana possession should be decriminalized in Kansas, citing the waste of taxpayer dollars on investigation, prosecution, and incarceration for non-violent offenses.
“I don’t believe that someone should be doing years for something that’s legal all around us, and in a majority of states.”
By Anna Kaminski, Kansas Reflector
A Kansas court said Deshaun Durham was supposed to serve more than seven years in prison for a first-time marijuana offense.
Durham tried to sway the state’s Prison Review Board to recommend clemency, and the board denied his application.
But Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly (D) overruled the board’s decision November 6 and commuted Durham’s sentence. Friday, he walked out of the Hutchinson prison where he had spent the last two-and-a-half years.
Durham, of Manhattan, was arrested as a 20 year old in 2020 for possession of more than two pounds of marijuana with intent to distribute. He had no criminal history and was later sentenced to 92 months. In the roughly two years between his arrest and sentencing, Durham worked as a Chinese food delivery driver and stayed out of trouble.
Prison changed him, he said.
Durham said he saw “things I’m going to carry with me for the rest of my life.”
On the outside, he felt people saw him as just a criminal. Inside prison, he wasn’t criminal enough.
“He said, ‘I’m losing myself,’” recalled his mother, Brandi Davis.
“To me it was like, ‘Wow, this kid has shown he can make the right choices, and they still thought he needed to be imprisoned for eight years,’” Davis said.
While Durham was serving his sentence, Davis spent her days advocating for his release. She joined with the Last Prisoner Project, a nonprofit drug policy reform organization, to pursue clemency.
Barry Grissom, a former U.S. Attorney for the District of Kansas under the Obama administration, represented Durham through his work as legal counsel for the Last Prisoner Project. Durham’s plight isn’t new in Kansas, he said in a news release on the day of Durham’s release.
He said Kansas ought to decriminalize marijuana possession, use and production and craft public policies that regulate and tax it like alcohol.
“To fail to do otherwise means taxpayer dollars are wasted on investigation, interdiction, prosecution and incarceration of individuals, thereby depriving law enforcement from utilizing those funds for more meaningful law enforcement measures to keep us safe in our communities,” Grissom said
In his first few days on the outside, Durham attended a Kansas City Chiefs football game, at the invitation of wide receiver Xavier Worthy. He went back to his old job Monday at the Chinese restaurant. The owner was one of several people who wrote letters in support of Durham during his clemency process.
In spite of his freedom, Durham is mindful of the thousands of others incarcerated for marijuana crimes.
“I don’t believe that someone should be doing years for something that’s legal all around us, and in a majority of states,” he said.
This story was first published by Kansas Reflector.
Thousands Of Kansas Residents Have Medical Marijuana Cards—From Neighboring Missouri