This portrait shows Solomon Sivils, recorded as Inmate No. 4339, photographed in 1904, at the time of his sentencing. He was sentenced to 18 months in prison and fined $10 for introducing liquor into Indian Territory.
The prison physician formally described him as:
“Solomon Sivils, Inmate Number 4339, at Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. Tubercular and extremely emaciated from morphine addiction. Unfit for manual labor.”
@mainesm6@rajboshmahal@ofcrdeonjoseph Ya you right but he is super young and he has no criminal record. In 17.5 years, nobody will remember any of this in the zeitgeist. He'll be sent to a youngster I.D. unit and it's gonna be hard for him to act right anyways, so he'll probably be in trouble jus cause prison culture
@DovySimuMMA Smart move. And stupid of USADA to deny a exemption. Common sense. He gets an exemption, he heals, the gets off the shit, they test him for 6 months, if he's clean he gets to fight. Look at USADA now, unemployed
@rajboshmahal@ofcrdeonjoseph Under texas law he'll have to serve at least 17.5 years before eligible. He'd probably have a decent chance of parole after that if he acts right. If he goes down being a knuckle head he won't make his 1st parole.
@calypsoisi@SaycheeseDGTL This has to be fake. After sentencing it takes 30-45 days to catch chain, I've never heard of Pack unit being an intake facility but maybe it is now days.