joining me now, ben cort, david evans a special adviser to the drug free america foundation and criminalefense attorney. neil franklin, retired police major and executive director of law enforcement against prohibition. back with us, jack holmes who is representing jacob. thank you, everyone, for swrojog us. neil, we heard about a teen who could theoretically face life in prison for pot brownies. does this potential punishment fit the crime? >> absolutely not. this is absolutely ridiculous. at a time when the administration of this country is moving in a direction of eliminating minimum mandatory sentences here we have this 19-year-old for baking pot brownies facing five years to life. absolutely ridiculous. it's time for these archaic policies to disappear when we have colorado and washington state where this -- where what he did wouldn't even be a crime. there's actually a legal process for him to go into business and bake the very same goods, and it wouldn't be a crime. this shouldn't even be a crime. that's the bigger picture here. >> you know, just today in colorado the governor sig