paris hilton sent home early
as i'm sure you've heard, paris has left the building.ms. paris hilton was reassigned to home confinement, 3 days into a 23-day jail sentence. a few observations from a sociological criminologist:
1. yes, in my experience, this sort of thing is pretty unusual.
2. indeed, people are going to be very pissed about the whole equal-justice-is-a-sham aspects of this case.
2. indeed, people are going to be very pissed about the whole equal-justice-is-a-sham aspects of this case.
3. i believe that the los angeles county sheriff's office must have anticipated the outrage that this move would spark. based on the remarks by sheriff baca's spokesperson steve whitmore, the office appears to be medicalizing and, hence, normalizing ms. hilton's treatment. they seem to be suggesting that sending inmates home for medical reasons is standard operating procedure in the l.a. county jail.
4. i'm not so cynical that i dismiss the possibility that ms. hilton was reassigned based on legitimate medical or humanitarian grounds, rather than (or in addition to) naked discrimination based on her race, gender, celebrity, or wealth. trust me, any young inmate's first couple days behind bars are rough. about half of all jail suicides occur during the inmate's first week in custody, with the highest suicide rate among inmates under the age of 18.
5. of course, thousands of poor and anonymous inmates, many with debilitating mental health problems, will also be struggling to survive this night in jail. and few of them will be sent home or reassigned to house arrest.


4 Comments:
I do have to say, in my short lifespan, this is probably the most egregious abuse I've ever come across. As a guy who's spent more time in jail for walking acorss an imaginary line trying to stop an illegal war, I'm pretty upset about this. But for people who are in for real sentences for things that shouldn't be crimes (e.g. minor drug posession and the like) must be really upset.
once sentenced, the rich and famous are sometimes subject to equal-bordering-on-harsh treatment -- simply because the world is watching. it now almost seems as if some jurisdictions are beyond this sort of shame and public derision. i'd like to think that the hennepin or ramsey county jail systems would be different. they certainly were operating differently back in my jail/sleepover days; reassignment was not an option.
What about the original sentence -- jail time for driving with a suspended license, first offense? Would a non-celeb have been similarly sentenced? Surely there are data on this.
rumour was she didn't eat or drink so guards or other inmates couldn't snap a photo of her on the potty
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