Los Angeles Times reports.Last year, Buck was convicted after four hours of deliberations on all nine charges brought against him, including maintaining a drug den, distributing methamphetamine, enticement to cross state lines to engage in sex work, and providing the drugs that led to the deaths of Gemmel Moore, 26, and Timothy Dean, 55.Prosecutors had tens of thousands of texts, voice mails, and videos that laid out Buck's rampant drug use and his fetish for injecting Black men with hard drugs and then having sex with them, often when they were too high to consent.
Some of Buck's victims — several of whom were homeless and just looking for a place to sleep for the night — wept on the witness stand and told the jury how Buck would also inject them without their approval, including when they were already unconscious.
Buck's racism was also on display to the jury with witnesses recounting his use of slurs and Blackface-type masks.Leading up to Thursday’s sentencing hearing at the L.A.
federal courthouse, Buck’s lawyers had requested that the 67-year-old receive a sentence that would one day have Buck leave prison and return to society, according to the Times.