KWAME GOES TO JAIL!
STORY FROM DETROIT NEWS...
Thursday, August 7, 2008
Mayor Kilpatrick to spend night in jail
Doug Guthrie and David Josar / The Detroit News
DETROIT -- A judge on Thursday ordered Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick to jail, shocking the city and plunging the leadership of the nation's 11th-largest city into uncertainty.
Despite a plea from Kilpatrick that invoked his sons, his respect for the judicial process and his love of the city, 36th District Judge Ronald Giles was unmoved. He revoked Kilpatrick's bond, ordering him to jail on a bond violation for a July 23 trip to Windsor.
As Kilpatrick's lips quivered, Giles ended a short speech by concluding: "If it was not Kwame Kilpatrick sitting in that seat, if it was John Six-Pack sitting in the seat, what would I do? That answers something. So I go back to my original, 'Keep it simple.'
"That's what I have to do ... the court is revoking your bond, that all travel be suspended, and two, that you to be remanded to Wayne County Jail."
Wayne County sheriff's deputies were expected to pick up Kilpatrick from 36th District Court at noon and transport him to the main jail on St. Antoine, said John Roach, a spokesman for Sheriff Warren Evans. At 11:30 a.m., he said deputies were still working out lodging arrangements, such as whether Kilpatrick will be in solitary confinement.
Kilpatrick will spend the night in jail. His attorneys immediately appealed to Wayne Circuit Judge Thomas E. Jackson, who said he will hear the appeal at 9 a.m. Friday.
The order from Giles came after Kilpatrick threw himself at the court's mercy, acknowledging he violated the terms of his bond with the trip.
He said he instructed his sons to watch the proceedings because he respects the process so much. Appearing contrite, he said he is under "tremendous strain and scrutiny" but traveled to Windsor to revive a sagging deal to sell the city's share of the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel and avert 2,000 layoffs looming in September without the $65 million deal.
"I respect this process more than I've respected any process in my life and I'm sorry," said Kilpatrick, who wore a gray suit.
"I did violate the conditions of this bond."
A lawyer, Kilpatrick said his life has been "revolutionarily transformed" by the criminal case and "transformed by a media that doesn't know me at all. I ask for your forgiveness. It will never happen again."
Giles wasn't convinced. Earlier in the proceeding, he asked Kilpatrick's attorney, James C. Thomas, why he had to learn about the case from the media.
"Who was dying? Who was sick?" Giles asked.
"The city of Detroit," Thomas said.
In sending Kilpatrick to jail, Giles said:
"I don't in any way claim to have a good understanding of what your responsibilities are and what you do," he said. "I do understand you have to be under a tremendous amount of pressure and how that can affect you. But I have to look at how the system is run and is perceived by the public.
"I don't care what the media says about me. I really don't. I never have. I try to do what I think is right and fair...
"In this case, in the beginning, you were given every privilege that could be given to you in regards to travel, totally unrestricted initially. (Later) I felt you were abusing the privilege, and I modified the bond."
The mayor's bottom lip stuck out, and he had his fingers to his mouth as Giles spoke.
It's unclear who is running Detroit.
Council President Kenneth V. Cockrel Jr. said the latest development should increase pressure on Kilpatrick to step down. Kilpatrick has resisted those calls since he was charged in March.
"It's just another unfortunate chapter," he said. "This is another set of world wide headlines that make us an international punch-line.
"Behind the scenes, momentum for him to go is building," Cockrel said.
But he's not convinced that it will change Kilpatrick's grip on his job.
"I'm not in his head," Cockrel said. "I don't see how the city's best interests are served by prolonging the agony with this.
"It's not good for the region and not good for the state."
Cockrel said he has a 100-day plan if he has to take over as mayor, but declined to get into specifics.
"Should it become necessary, I am prepared to step up and do what I need to do," Cockrel said. "It started thinking about it a couple months ago."
Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor Robert Moran had asked the judge to revoke the bail -- and at the very least restrict his travel -- because Kilpatrick "isn't taking responsibility" for violating his bond with the 45-minute trip to Windsor.
"He didn't notify anyone ... he left country, he left the state ...but we found out about it from the media," Moran said. "That is a flagrant violation of bond."
"This is just not serious to him," Moran said. "We want the travel cut off ... this court should be outraged."
An attorney for Kilpatrick, James Parkman, said Giles' order did not come as a surprise.
"There are some options that are less extreme," Parkman said, referring to tethering and restricted travel
The jailing came after Kilpatrick and his former chief of staff, Christine Beatty, waived their right to a preliminary hearing in multiple felonies and agreed to proceed directly to trial.
The July 23 trip also happened the day before Kilpatrick allegedly had a physical confrontation with a Wayne County sheriff's detective that resulted in Giles increasing the mayor's personal recognizance bond to 10 percent of $75,000, tightening his travel restrictions and ordering random drug tests.
One of Kilpatrick's lawyers said Wednesday that he also expects the mayor will be charged soon by state Attorney General Mike Cox in connection with the July 24 incident in which Kilpatrick is alleged to have shoved Wayne County Detective Brian White, the chief criminal investigator on the case, on the front porch of the home of the mayor's sister, Ayanna.
White and prosecutor's investigator JoAnn Kinney testified at a bond hearing before Giles on July 25 that they were attempting to serve a subpoena on Bobby Ferguson, a city contractor and friend of Kilpatrick's who was expected to testify at the preliminary examination.
Also, Kilpatrick and Beatty are accused of lying under oath to cover an affair and the firing of a deputy police chief; and misleading the City Council into an $8.4 million settlement with a secret side agreement to keep secret hide text messages that allegedly reveal the lies.
Both were charged March 24 with multiple crimes that carry a maximum of up to 15 years in prison. Although a preliminary examination where a judge decides if there is enough evidence to bind defendants over for trial in Wayne County Circuit Court usually happens within 14 days, battles over evidence in this case caused Giles to delay the probable cause hearing until Sept. 22.
The Rev. Horace Sheffield, a leader on a fund to raise money for the mayor, said he hopes the mayor will offer up some sort of deal to put an end to the situation.
"I love the mayor like my own son," Sheffield said. "But even my son at some point would have to learn to abide by the restraints he placed upon himself."
"While the mayor should be working himself out of this, he's giving others further reasons to bury him," Sheffield said. "My prayers are with him. I would hope that at some point that he would recognize how serious this is."
Political consultant Sam Riddle, a onetime adviser to Councilwoman Monica Conyers, said Kilpatrick will go to jail "because of his own arrogance."
"It's a good lesson for him. No one is above the law. He's always behaved as if he was above the law," Riddle said.
"If he really loved the city like he says he does, he would step down now. But he won't do that because he's selfish and self-serving."
You can reach Doug Guthrie at (313) 222-2548 or dguthrie@detnews.com.
DOES MY HOPING HIS SHORT PRISON STINT RESEMBLES THIS MAKE ME A BAD PERSON?
CLICK HERE... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3uNm-GwnDZ0
ALSO, SPECIAL MESSAGE FOR KWAME... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5S-H4uE0y0


11 Comments:
Jeez Jeff, what took you so long? This story has been all over the news for at least an hour.
Get with the program!
August 7, 2008 1:16 PM
Check this out too....
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080807/BLOG2503/80807052/0/NEWS01
August 7, 2008 1:32 PM
Detroit is a safer place, at least for one night, with this thug behind bars.
August 7, 2008 1:57 PM
Kwame's quivering lips are on the front pic on USA Today's home page. I love that this story is getting national exposure and puts this smug thug in his place, but unfortunately it puts the city in an extremely unflattering light and probably perpetuates the stereotypes associated with Detroit.
In any case, it's too bad that he'll be in isolation during his short stay in the slammer. It'd be great if he'd be in gen pop instead. He'd likely learn his lesson quicker that way.
August 7, 2008 2:06 PM
Ooh Kwame got a small taste of what is to come. I hope it leaves a bad taste in his mouth like he has to the city. I bet you Strawberry wishes she had the ability to spend a night in jail.
August 7, 2008 2:24 PM
And what delightful timing, with so much press in the area for the PGA . . . Hooray, yet ANOTHER disappointment for Detroit and Michigan.
August 7, 2008 3:34 PM
Ha ha, yeah Kwame, go home and get your fucking shine box. Man I miss hearing that line. Can't wait until you guys are back on air.
August 7, 2008 9:56 PM
Hey Kwame: GO HOME AND GET YOUR FUCKIN SHINEBOX!! OH WAIT!! YOU CANT!!
Also..
Jeff.. I like your blog.. at least here I can actually say stuff to you without Rudy hanging up on me first. haha
August 7, 2008 10:26 PM
I was thinking maybe Bubba could make Kwame his "friend" for the night, but then realized, Kwame IS the big black dude we refer to as Bubba.
August 8, 2008 9:20 AM
Here's my take - Giles was presented with 3 situations yesterday (Freep's request of the new texts, Kwames request to waive pre-lim and this bond violation). The move to put Kwame in jail overnight was actually the least detrimental to Kwame of the three. Giles is the judge that Kym Worthy LEAST wanted to oversee these cases, so Giles had to play the good judge yesterday, he couldn't rule in favor of Kwame on all 3 issues, lest he be condemned for being biased, but he did rule in Kwame's favor for two of them. The two that would have brought WAY more embarrassment to Kwame.
As hard as I laughed when I found out Kwames dumb ass was going to spend a night in jail, I can't help but think we are all being fooled and Kwame still wins. This has made national news, thereby overshadowing the fact that he's still hiding shit and Giles has now enabled him to continue to hide it.
August 8, 2008 9:25 AM
"Bring out the Gimp." I think the Gimp is in for a big world of hurt.
I saw some crazy woman on the news the other night saying that Canada is practically across the street from Detroit. "It's not as if he left the country." YES HE DID, BITCH, YES HE DID.
RESIGN!
YOU BASTARD!
August 10, 2008 5:08 AM
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