User:Somnabot/Sandbox2
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Jamiel Alexander Chagra (born December 7, 1944 in El Paso, Texas) a.k.a 'Jimmy Chagra' was one of the largest and most prolific American marijuana traffickers operating out of Las Vegas and El Paso. He was implicated in the May 1979 assassination of John H. Wood, Jr. in San Antonio, Texas.
Chagra was arrested in 1978 on charges of trafficking marijuana as much as 300,000 pounds[1] a month. He was to appear before Judge Wood. Wood had a reputation for giving out the maximum sentence allowed for drug related crimes. Chagra faced a maximum life sentence without parole if convicted and a law clerk of the late judge told Joe Chagra, Jamiel's brother and attorney, that Judge Wood intended to give Chagra life without parole. Chagra allegedly attempted to bribe Judge Wood for $10,000,000 ($100,000,000 in 2006 dollars[2]). Facing life for smuggling pot, Jamiel Chagra decided to kill the judge.
Chagra supposedly hired Charles Harrelson (the father of actor Woody Harrelson) to kill Wood for $250,000. Harrelson supposedly shot and killed Judge Wood in the back outside his home in May of 1979. Chagra stood trial for the murder before another judge and was sentenced, for trafficking marijuana, to 30 years. There is no parole in Federal Prison and only 52 days a year of earned good time. Chagra however, was paroled for health reasons and was released in Atlanta, Georgia on December 9, 2003 under a new name provided by the US Government supposedly under the witness protection program. Even though Chagra spent over 25 years in the Federal System he is not even listed as an ex-inmate in the Federal Bureau of Prisons inmate locater system[3]
Harrelson was eventually convicted of being the gunman when Chagra spoke about it to his brother who was visiting him in prison. Both Harrelson and Chagra's brother Joe were impicated in the assassination. Harrelson got life, Joe Chagra got 10 years, and Jimmy Chagra's wife Elizabeth also got several years and died in prison in 1987. Chagra himself was aquitted of the murder of Judge Wood in front of William Sessions, represented by Oscar Goodman who is currently the Mayor of Las Vegas. Chagra, in a deal with the feds, admitted to his role in the murder of Judge Wood and the attempted murder of a US Attorney to have his wife released before she died and to have him transferred to a medical prison. The Feds reneged on the deal to release his wife and she died of ovarian cancer at 41 years of age in prison.
After his release in 2003 Chagra told this author (politicalmerc) that Harrelson did NOT murder Judge Wood. He did not identify the real killer, but he indicated that the real killer was deceased[1]. Jamiel and Joe Chagra misled federal officials by talking about hiring Harrelson to kill Judge Wood when they knew they were being illegally taped during an attorney visit in prison. Jamiel and Joe Chagra framed Harrelson for the murder because he had been blackmailing Joe Chagra by saying he would admit to having killed the judge and would testify against Chagra if he didn't pay him off[1].
Another of the brothers, Lee Chagra, was gunned down in 1978 in a petty robbery of his office. Joe Chagra died in an automobile accident in 1996.
[Although the basic story is correct, there are some significant errors in the above narrative. Some are misunderstandings, and some are the result of self-serving misinformation supplied by Mr. Chagra to the author. Elizabeth Chagra could have been released from prison after she was diagnosed with cancer if indeed Jamiel had agreed to acknowledge his own role in the murder of Wood, but he refused to do so; the government did not renege. Also, Chagra was released from prison in 2003 partly because of his health, but mostly because it was then that he finally admitted his role in hiring Harrelson, and, more importantly, he agreed to testify against Harrelson in his future parole hearings. An excellent and mostly accurate account of this story was written by Gary Cartwright in a book entitled "Dirty Dealing." -- ksuave)
Ellenida 01:08, 6 June 2007 (UTC)==Notes==
- ^ a b c These facts were communicated directly to the author (politicalmerc) by Jimmy Chagra himself after his release and during his stay in Atlanta, Georgia before leaving town.
- ^ This figure is the Future value of $10,000,000 in 1979 brought forward to 2006 at a rate of 3% annual inflation.
- ^ Inmate Locator.
When the trial for the murder of Judge Wood was held, Federal Parole was still part of the sentencing guidelines. Parole was abolished under the Sentence Reform Act of 1984 but, anyone charged, but not convicted before that date, was still eligible for parole. Anyone charged and sentenced after the Federal SRA was passed received a fixed-term sentence with 52 days Statutory Good Time (SGT) per year - which can be revoked if an inmate violates FBOP prison rules.
FBOP, Retired

