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Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,311
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

@Linmo wrote:

@Mersha wrote:

Diddy requested a pardon today.

 

I bet he gets one.


@Mersha He has a grudge against Diddy right now, so I don't think it will happen.

 


@Linmo  I hope you are right. 

"My desire to be well informed is currently at odds with my desire to remain sane."
Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,838
Registered: ‎10-19-2012

@willowbark wrote:

With all the civil suits waiting to be heard, all of Diddy's money will be gone. 

 

He will be forced to sell his many pricey homes.  His multi million dollar mansions.  

 

The prosecution overcharged and were told beforehand what would happen but they continued anyway causing themselves embarrassment to their dept that will not be soon forgotten.  


 

 

To get rid of the cases he might settle out of court.  I doubt he will go broke.  He probably has a lot of money saved in off shore accounts.

Valued Contributor
Posts: 623
Registered: ‎08-08-2010

Goldengate8362 said: "It's outrageous that brutality and violence against women isn't taken more seriously in our judicial system and in our culture, generally. "

 

And this is why abused women are afraid to come forth.

 

Diddy should've been punished harsher but his jury has more blacks than any other race. whites and the rest Asian and Hispanic. Ir was bound to work in his favor. And knowing the sentence would be reduced for time served, it should've made up for that. SO disappoiting that after all he did it was barely a slap on the wrist. 

"I never changed, I just learned."
Respected Contributor
Posts: 4,508
Registered: ‎12-16-2013

@pdlinda wrote:

@Linmo   As someone who is retired after doing criminal defense work for MANY YEARS, I can assure all the sentencing critics that he has 5 YRS of supervised parole after he is released from prison.

 

He will be watched very closely.  If he so much as fails to "dot an I" or "cross a T" he will be reprimanded and held to acct. There are consequences on a continuum for infractions.  Most importantly, that would include trying to contact any victim (or have anyone else do so).

 

If he thinks he can "talk his way" out of negative situations, I assure you the officers in the parole dept are seasoned professionals who will come down hard on him.

 

In my experience, if a parolee is violated and his parole is revoked, he will have to return to court and the judge will tend to sentence him to the maximum term reccommended at the original sentencing.  They don't fool around in the Parole Dept.

 

He better understand his every move will be monitored.

 


I'm glad to read that his supervised parole will closely monitor him for 5 more years after his release.  IMO, he is not remorseful and will not change.