Chicago Sun-Times

Suburban man in drug case gets sentence commuted.

- BY FRANK MAIN, STAFF REPORTER fmain@suntimes.com | @FrankMainN­ews Contributi­ng: Jon Seidel, Lynn Sweet

A Lombard man serving a life sentence for participat­ing in a drug conspiracy was granted clemency late Tuesday and said he plans to help free other people behind bars for marijuana conviction­s.

Craig Cesal, 61, got in trouble for leasing tractor-trailers to marijuana smugglers almost two decades ago. Late Tuesday, the White House announced that Donald Trump, in his final hours as president, had commuted Cesal’s sentence.

The White House said Cesal “had an exemplary disciplina­ry record” and “looks forward to reintegrat­ing back into society and to contributi­ng to his community while living with his daughter with whom he has remained close. Mr. Cesal hopes to be a part of her upcoming wedding.”

In 2002, U.S. border agents found 1,500 pounds of pot in a secret compartmen­t in one of his trucks at a checkpoint in Laredo, Texas. Federal drug agents followed the truck to Georgia, where the pot was delivered.

“I never received any direct revenue from marijuana,” Cesal said in an interview with the Chicago Sun-Times.

Cesal said one of the biggest advocates for his release was Alice Johnson, who got a full pardon from Trump last year. She was sentenced to life in prison for her involvemen­t in a Memphis cocaine-traffickin­g ring.

Cesal plans to travel. In addition to visiting the South on a motorcycle, he’d like to go to the western United States to thank people in the marijuana industry there who’ve advocated for his release.

In June, the government temporaril­y released Cesal from the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, and allowed him to return home to Lombard, where he’s been staying with his mother.

Cesal was put on home confinemen­t to protect him from getting the coronaviru­s in prison. He suffers from diabetes and asthma, which put him at risk of having serious medical complicati­ons from the virus.

Cesal said he’s been allowed to leave home with the approval of the U.S. Bureau of Prisons. He said a trip to the doctor was a bit surrealist­ic.

“I found myself standing right next to a cannabis store on the South Side with a GPS device on my ankle — knowing I was still serving a life sentence for cannabis,” he said.

He said he hopes to work for the Last Prisoner Project, a nonprofit group involved in cannabis reforms. His goal is to help free people locked up on marijuana-related conviction­s.

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Craig Cesal
PROVIDED Craig Cesal

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