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Connecting The Dots: The Bizarre Criminal Case of Caleb Moore
On February 1, 2016, Pike County, Alabama District Attorney Tom Anderson dropped state drug charges against Caleb Moore. This action was taken after Moore agreed to enter a pretrial diversion program available through the district attorney's office. Caleb Moore is the son of controversial and recently suspended Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore.
Moore, 25, was arrested on March 15, 2015, in Troy, Alabama, and was subsequently indicted by a Pike County grand jury on drug possession charges. On December 21, 2015, Moore entered a plea of not guilty and waived his right to appear at an arraignment on charges of unlawful possession of a controlled substance (alprazolam), a felony, and second degree possession of marijuana, a misdemeanor. Moore's jury trial was set for March 2, 2016, with Pike County Circuit Judge Jeffery W. Kelley presiding.
Once Tom Anderson elected to use his prosecutorial discretion to drop the drug charges against Moore, this official act constituted the fourth big break Moore has received in drug-related cases since 2011.
Case closed, right? Wrong!
How has Moore, who been arrested on drug possession charges three times by three different law enforcement agencies within a five-year period, avoided jail time completely?
Has the state of Alabama been as generous to other drug offenders who have been arrested on drug possession charges three times within a five-year period as it has been to Caleb Moore?
How did Moore avoid having his probation revoked after testing positive for illegal drug use while serving a sentence imposed upon him from his second arrest?
What did the dropped charges in Moore's Pike County drug case have to do with a unanimous Alabama Supreme Court ruling on March 31, 2016, in which the state of Alabama won the right to dispose of bingo machines and cash seized in a raid of Milton McGregor's Macon County-based VictoryLand gaming establishment?
We will take you deep inside of a broken Alabama criminal justice system where all things are possible, especially if you are well connected to the right people. Just when you thought that you had read everything imaginable about Alabama's justice system, get ready to be shocked again.
Stay tune for an exclusive Facebook news team report connecting all of the dots.
Donald V. Watkins
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