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- NATION, Page 65American NotesIRAN-CONTRAOllie Learns His Fate
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- U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard Gesell is known as a
- tough sentencer, but he turned surprisingly lenient last week.
- Though Gesell could have sent former Lieut. Colonel Oliver North
- to prison for ten years for his role in the Iran-contra affair,
- the judge declined to do so. Instead, after listening to North
- softly declare that he had grieved over his "mistakes," he
- handed North three suspended sentences, two years' probation,
- $150,000 in fines and 1,200 hours of community service in an
- antidrug program for inner-city youths. (The Navy promptly
- suspended North's $23,000-a-year pension but recommended that
- the Comptroller General restore it when the matter comes before
- him.) Incarceration, Gesell explained, would only harden the
- "misconceptions" that had led North into wrongdoing. In Gesell's
- sight, North was a "low-ranking subordinate" ordered into
- illegal activity by "cynical superiors" in the White House's
- "elite isolation." Said Gesell: "You're not the fall guy for
- this tragic breach of public trust."
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