Saturday, August 27, 2011

And....

lining went from a 6 to a 10.8. While on Lupron. Commencing a new plan that will involve world domination by my ovaries because let's face it, these puppies can populate the world when pissed off.

On the home front (or I guess you would say the county jail front), the oldest boys public defender convinced him to plead guilty without any deal....he just pled guilty to everything. He got 10 years. Wow.

I have nothing else. Off to drown myself in a vat of chocolate.

8 comments:

  1. WTF???? Its rare that I tell a client to plead without an agreement in place, and by rare, I mean RARE! Was he already sentenced???

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  2. Sentenced the same day. Waived the SAR on the advice of counsel also.

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  3. OMG!!! He totally got sold up the river!!! I hate hearing stories like that!

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  4. In MO they always get 120 days shock first so if he is good in that he will get out on probation. I really think he needed to get about a year of time. 10 is too long and 120 days is not long enough. Very frustrated right now.

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  5. 120 days is a long time to be locked up, especially now that he's over 18 and it'll be in real jail, not kiddie jail. It sounds like he has a lot going on, I really hope he can make it on probation.

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  6. What he really needs is to be forced to get a job as a condition of his probation. He has many issues but I feel most of them would be solved by being forced to work. But they don't do that anymore here....it violates your civil liberties to be forced to work. Guess that means you and I are violated every darn day.

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  7. That's crazy...anyone on probation or parole up here is required to find a job or go to school, or do a combination of both. It violates our civil liberties to make us work?? Who pays the way for the probationers when they're out??

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  8. Most of them get out and go right back to what they were doing before. Then they are picked up and charged with parole/probation violation. Six months to a year later they are sentenced on that charge...to 120 days shock. After this happens three or four times, they maybe serve real time. People know that the laws have no teeth around here so the criminals keep being criminals.

    The boy actually has a college scholarship (he is very bright and Catholic school educated) but he won't use it. Grrrr.....

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