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If This Don't Chap Your Buns, Nothing Will

Mike

Well-known member
A California state senator who resigned his seat after being convicted of eight counts of perjury and voter fraud and sentenced to 90 days in prison has been freed before he even entered the jail system.

Roderick Wright was convicted in January, four years after a Los Angeles County grand jury charged him with lying about his address on his voter registration and campaign documents, and with voting fraudulently in five different elections.

Wright registered to vote at an address in Inglewood owned by his common-law stepmother, while prosecutors said he actually lived in the Baldwin Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles. Registering to vote in Inglewood allowed Wright to run for and win office in his Inglewood-based district; California law requires state lawmakers to live within their districts.

After his conviction, Wright faced up to eight years in prison, but in September, a judge sentenced him to just 90 days and barred him from ever holding public office again. On Friday, Wright reported to the Los Angeles County jail to begin serving his term.

But California’s prison system is overflowing with so many inmates that they have no room for a nonviolent offender with no prior convictions. Wright was processed, booked and released after just over an hour.

A spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County sheriff’s department told the Sacramento Bee that Wright received no special treatment. Prison authorities use a formula to calculate which offenders are sent to prison and when they are released. State prisons, which are facing pressure from courts to reduce crowding, ship prisoners to county jails, creating crowded conditions at the local level.

“A lot of people are not serving 100 percent of their time because of overcrowding,” the spokeswoman, Nicole Nishida, told the Bee.

No surprise here, but he's black too.
 

mrj

Well-known member
It's too bad they can't/won't/don't require him to work and donate much of his earnings to charity or government in lieu of jail time under the circumstances, especially as he apparently has a place to live. Or to work for no pay in some government institution.....but I suppose those places are staffed with union members who cannot be displaced with 'free' labor.

There sure needs to be some way for people to pay for their crimes to discourage commission of more crimes.

mrj
 

Faster horses

Well-known member
mrj said:
It's too bad they can't/won't/don't require him to work and donate much of his earnings to charity or government in lieu of jail time under the circumstances, especially as he apparently has a place to live. Or to work for no pay in some government institution.....but I suppose those places are staffed with union members who cannot be displaced with 'free' labor.

There sure needs to be some way for people to pay for their crimes to discourage commission of more crimes.

mrj

Good post, mrj and :agree:
 
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