Former A.L. man gets 15 years in federal prison
Published 11:22 am Monday, October 31, 2011
A former Albert Lea resident with several past felony convictions was sentenced Wednesday to 15 years in federal prison for possession of a handgun.
Due to his prior convictions, Adonis Adolph Dorman, 31, is classified as a “career criminal” under federal law and is prohibited from possessing guns or ammunition, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
Federal statute mandates a minimum 15-year sentence for the handgun violation.
Dorman pleaded guilty in April to possessing a .44-caliber handgun during a search of his Minneapolis house in August 2010 by the Hennepin County Violent Offender Task Force.
The plea came as part of an agreement. When Dorman pleaded guilty, six other charges were dismissed.
Dorman was convicted of burglary in 1999, fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct in 2002, fleeing police in a motor vehicle in 2002, second-degree methamphetamine sales in 2009 and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle in 2009, among other lesser crimes.
According to court documents, the criminal sexual conduct charge came out of Waseca County and involved an incident in April 2001 with Dorman and his cousin, Eric Michael Dorman.
The cousins reportedly lured two Albert Lea girls, ages 14 and 15, to their rural New Richland home, gave the girls alcohol and repeatedly sexually assaulted them.
The meth sales charge came about in Freeborn County after Dorman reportedly sold meth to an undercover drug task force informant.
Dorman was sentenced Wednesday by U.S. District Court Judge John R. Tunheim.
Tunheim ordered Dorman serve his time at a federal prison in Leavenworth, Kan., and be allowed to participate in a 500-hour comprehensive drug treatment program if he is eligible.
His federal term will run concurrent with an 88-month state court sentence.