To: ShadowDancer
"No matter where Law signed the revocation order, her conduct was in the presence of the judge," the Appeals Court wrote in its decision last month
What if she had waited to write it after the judge left the courtroom?
2 posted on
01/06/2008 6:03:35 PM PST by
Krankor
(kROGER)
To: ShadowDancer
If that isn’t punishable as contempt, I’m not entirely sure what would be.
3 posted on
01/06/2008 6:07:31 PM PST by
RichInOC
(Stupidity is its own punishment...but some people need an enhanced sentence.)
To: ShadowDancer
Figures. If she was smart, she wouldn’t be in court in the first place.
4 posted on
01/06/2008 6:30:19 PM PST by
popdonnelly
(Get Reid. Salazar, and Harkin out of the Senate.)
To: ShadowDancer
While signing that probation revocation order, Law decided to tell the judge what she could kiss. Typically that document would not go back to the judge, but when this one did, Goodstein ordered a hearing, found Law in contempt and sentenced her to 90 days on top of her remaining sentence.
I think she earned that charge.
5 posted on
01/06/2008 6:44:33 PM PST by
kinoxi
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