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UnavailableITS UP THERE PODCAST EPISODE 22 | CALVIN" BIG FRIDGE' BRYANT | BIG FRIDGE| 17 YEARS ON FIRST DRUG OFFENSIVE
Currently unavailable

ITS UP THERE PODCAST EPISODE 22 | CALVIN" BIG FRIDGE' BRYANT | BIG FRIDGE| 17 YEARS ON FIRST DRUG OFFENSIVE

FromITS UP THERE PODCAST W/LOONEY


Currently unavailable

ITS UP THERE PODCAST EPISODE 22 | CALVIN" BIG FRIDGE' BRYANT | BIG FRIDGE| 17 YEARS ON FIRST DRUG OFFENSIVE

FromITS UP THERE PODCAST W/LOONEY

ratings:
Length:
85 minutes
Released:
Nov 6, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

LOCKED UP 10 YEARS ON FIRST NON VILOENT DRUG OFFENSIVE!! ?? This will have been his first interview after being incarcerated! DONT MISS THIS FREE FACEBOOK EVENT! SIGN UP BELOW!!??

https://fb.me/e/1B05IRiYM

Brief description below

In 2009, Calvin Bryant was convicted of selling drugs and sentenced to 17 years in Tennessee state prison. He was a first-time offender, and he could have served less than three years; instead, he got 17. Here’s why.

At the time of his arrest, Calvin lived in the Edgehill Housing Projects in Nashville. Edgehill, like much of the urban areas of Nashville, is located in a drug-free school zone, and that’s where Calvin’s crime took place, where there is a school, park, or daycare center on practically every corner. Committing a drug crime in this zone can push a sentence out to absurd lengths. If Calvin had lived, however, in a wealthy residential section of the city—where homes are spacious and services are spread out—his sentence would not have been enhanced by the drug-free school law.

Less than three years, versus 17.

Calvin has been in prison now for almost a decade. For this first-time offense, Calvin has served longer than some rapists and murderers.

In all that time, since the day of his arrest, the support from those who know him has been unwavering. By several accounts, Calvin was a remarkable kid pressured into a very bad criminal decision. His teachers say he was a peacemaker, a born leader, a bright student. His friends say he is loyal, friendly, and generous. “I’ve known Calvin since the fifth grade,” says his girlfriend, Chenika Miller. “And we have always been friends. What attracts me to him, even all these years later, is his big heart and the fact that he has always remained loving, caring, and considerate of others.”

Calvin, now 31, admits he was, as he puts it, always a “Momma’s boy. She’s the reason I’m so strong.” He grew up in poverty, but he did not let that define him. He was a star football player in high school and went on to college and work at the Tennessean newspaper. “I lived in the hood, but my mom and dad always told me, ‘You can grow up in the hood, but you don’t have to let the projects live in you.’”

But in 2008, life delivered him a harsh blow, in the form of a government informant. This person, a longtime family friend, pressured Calvin repeatedly to get ecstasy pills for him. He played on Calvin’s sympathies, telling Calvin that he needed the drugs to make money to feed his family. Although Calvin resisted, the “family friend” reminded Calvin that he had helped to raise him. Finally, Calvin broke down and obtained 320 pills, which he then sold to the friend.

Calvin didn’t know that this “friend” was working for the Metro Nashville Police. At the time of Calvin’s arrest, the man had 39 convictions on his criminal record, several of them for violent felonies. Following Calvin’s arrest, the informant was paid $1,000 in taxpayers’ money. He escaped jail time altogether. 

Calvin’s first trial ended in a hung jury because some of the jurors agreed with Calvin’s defense that he had been entrapped into selling the ecstasy pills to the informant. But on retrial, he was convicted. And as with others FAMM has profiled (Sara Moore, Terrance Davis), location was everything when it came to his sentence: 17 years. The school zone law bumped up his felony conviction a full class and made him ineligible for parole until 15 years served.

This law wasn’t meant for Calvin, even though it applied to him. Since the law was enacted roughly 20 years ago, it has only been used in 62 cases in Davidson County, where Calvin was convicted. And Calvin is the only defendant in the history of the county to have the law applied for a first-time offense.


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Released:
Nov 6, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Welcome to It's Up There Podcast With Looney, AKA BIG LOON! Loon strives to be a business leader for the culture. When he speaks about the podcast business, record label business and contracts, he does it with a level of understanding that your average consumer would not have. Being able to see through the smoke and mirrors within the industry and the industry tricks, people come to It’s Up There for a one of a kind perspective and to get a full breakdown. Tune in! Audio drops on Mondays and video drops on Thursdays!