At age 19, while attending
Hampton University, Smith met Peter Hall, whom she began dating. Hall, who was nearly 28, was not a student at Hampton, but had been selling cocaine to students for two years by the time he met Smith. Hall "was a major figure in a $4 million
crack cocaine ring" and went on to abuse her physically, mentally, and emotionally. By mid-1992, Smith had become involved in Hall's drug ring in "a number of supporting roles," which she later said she carried through out of fear. In late 1993, during a "tense five-month hiatus" from Hall, she worked at the
Virginia Housing Development Authority. Still afraid to break up with Hall, she later joined him on the run from authorities beginning in December 1993. The two lived in Seattle for four months, with Smith now pregnant. She returned to her parents' home in August 1994, and turned herself in to the authorities on September 1. Hall was shot and killed in his apartment on October 1. Smith was charged with "conspiracy to crack and powder cocaine trafficking, money laundering and making false statements to federal agents." She pled guilty to all three charges, although she had never sold the drug. Although her attorney hoped Smith would receive a sentence reduction, she was ultimately sentenced in April 1994 to 24½ years in prison for a "first-time nonviolent crack cocaine offense" under
mandatory sentencing laws. Smith's parents spoke out against the
war on drugs and continued to advocate for their daughter for the length of her prison sentence. She served 6½ years at
Federal Correctional Institution, Danbury before
President Clinton's order of
clemency in December 2000. Smith saw her right to vote restored in 2012, == Activism ==