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Should Merchan move ahead with sentencing, Trump could be ordered to serve as much as four years of prison time, but the judge is not required to sentence the president-elect to prison, and he ...
Those given short sentences usually serve the full-time (do "day-for-day") as imposed by the judge, or might receive time off for good behavior, based on state or local rules and regulations. [citation needed] In the mid-1970s, most state and federal prisons moved from long term to short term sentencing. Over time, though, state and federal ...
In addition to his prison sentence, U.S. District Judge Janis L. Sammartino ordered Francis to pay the Navy $20 million in restitution and a $150,000 fine. ... At the time, Francis served four ...
A judge recognized Ellison's cooperation but still ruled against her lawyer's request for no jail time. ... her voice breaking as she asked a judge for a lenient sentence. Her parents and two ...
On December 14, Gunna was released from jail after he took an Alford plea, pleading guilty to a single charge of racketeering. [26] As a result, he was sentenced to five years in prison and 500 hours of community service, in which the first year was commuted to time served and the remaining four years were suspended due to probation conditions ...
Greatest amount of jail time given as a result of an appeal. Found guilty of crimes ranging from rape of an elderly woman in Tulsa County, Oklahoma to larceny, robbery and kidnapping, and sentenced to 2,250 years. He appealed, was reconvicted, re-sentenced and received an additional jail term of 9,500 years, later reduced by 500 years. [15] [13]
Former military defense contractor Leonard “Fat Leonard” Francis was sentenced Tuesday to 15 years in prison for ... U.S. District Judge Janis L. Sammartino also ordered Francis to pay $20 ...
Mark Arthur Ciavarella Jr. (born March 3, 1950) is an American convicted felon and former President Judge of the Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, who was involved, along with fellow judge Michael Conahan, in the "Kids for cash" scandal in 2008, [4] for which he was sentenced to 28 years in federal prison in 2011.