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Death Resulting
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An early morning drug deal between two friends ends in tragedy inside a hotel bathroom. One friend overdoses and dies. The other, Josh Cook, survives. The feds charge Josh with murder under the federal “death resulting” law, and he faces at least 20 years in prison. Does the punishment fit the crime?
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The origin story of death resulting laws dates back to the “War on Drugs” era and the shocking death of a 1980s basketball star. But the idea of charging overdose deaths as murders didn’t really take hold until the opioid epidemic.
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As a judge weighs Josh Cook’s sentence, here’s how he ended up dealing drugs in that hotel bathroom in the first place. Then, Josh and his mom unexpectedly cross paths – a chance encounter that highlights the choices the justice system makes about people with addiction: punishment or treatment.
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The day of Josh Cook’s sentencing arrives. There’s a twist, then more surprises as attorneys and the judge debate what justice really looks like in this case.
Document is a production of New Hampshire Public Radio. More at nhpr.org/document.
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Three years after his sentencing, Josh Cook and his mom have lived through even more consequences of America’s drug crisis and the ways we respond to it – each in their own dramatic and completely separate ways.
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I am a member of a familywith a close loved one struggling with drug addiction. I cannot even give you my background in 500 words. however I want to State Suboxone is as hard to get now as it was 5 years ago when this was written. and the thing that no one is thinking about right now Josh has 10 years in prison but when he gets out he's got a murder charge or whatever manslaughter on his record how will he find employment with a murder charge on his record recidivism is real
great podcast. I'll be rooting for you Josh and hopefully they let you out you do not deserve to be in jail ❤️