Simple question about Potter
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If I heard the judge correctly, she'll do 18 months, with another 6 months house arrest and then parole.
But I could be totally wrong.
@Jolly said in Simple question about Potter:
If I heard the judge correctly, she'll do 18 months, with another 6 months house arrest and then parole.
And what kind of life can she live afterward? Can she ever find a job?
ETA:
Judge Regina Chu handed down the sentence in a Minneapolis courtroom over the objection of prosecutors after the former officer apologized to the victim's family. Potter will serve 16 months in prison followed by eight months of supervised release.
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@Jolly said in Simple question about Potter:
If I heard the judge correctly, she'll do 18 months, with another 6 months house arrest and then parole.
And what kind of life can she live afterward? Can she ever find a job?
ETA:
Judge Regina Chu handed down the sentence in a Minneapolis courtroom over the objection of prosecutors after the former officer apologized to the victim's family. Potter will serve 16 months in prison followed by eight months of supervised release.
@George-K said in Simple question about Potter:
@Jolly said in Simple question about Potter:
If I heard the judge correctly, she'll do 18 months, with another 6 months house arrest and then parole.
And what kind of life can she live afterward? Can she ever find a job?
ETA:
Judge Regina Chu handed down the sentence in a Minneapolis courtroom over the objection of prosecutors after the former officer apologized to the victim's family. Potter will serve 16 months in prison followed by eight months of supervised release.
She can, but it won't be in law enforcement or anything where a felony conviction bars employment.
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I’m glad at least the judge significantly knocked down from the typical 80+ sentence to the 18-24 sentence. The judge’s speech after was good, she made it clear that Potter didn’t intend to do any harm and they police officers risk their lives daily and have to act in a split second during evolving scenarios.
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@Jolly said in Simple question about Potter:
If I heard the judge correctly, she'll do 18 months, with another 6 months house arrest and then parole.
And what kind of life can she live afterward? Can she ever find a job?
ETA:
Judge Regina Chu handed down the sentence in a Minneapolis courtroom over the objection of prosecutors after the former officer apologized to the victim's family. Potter will serve 16 months in prison followed by eight months of supervised release.
@George-K said in Simple question about Potter:
And what kind of life can she live afterward?
Better than his.
I once made the comment to a Cape Cod resident that Chappaquiddick ruined Teddy Kennedy's career. He replied that it didn't do hers much good either.
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C'mon, Phibes. Unlike Mary Jo, this guy put himself in a position where bodily harm was extremely likely. I have very little sympathy for him.
@Mik said in Simple question about Potter:
C'mon, Phibes. Unlike Mary Jo, this guy put himself in a position where bodily harm was extremely likely. I have very little sympathy for him.
I have sympathy for both of them, TBH - as in, both the cop and the perp
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It still goes back to the question of the purpose of prison? Rehabilitation? Reform? To remove a public threat? Punishment?
This woman does not need rehabilitation, does not need to be reformed, and is not a public threat. That leaves punishment. Okay, I can deal with punishment, but do any of you think that her prison sentence is going to be anything like a normal sentence? I wouldn’t be surprised if she’s dead in a month.
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I definitively wouldn't put her in GenPop. If they count the time she's already spent in jail, she's looking at what? Twelve months?
They might can keep her housed in a county jail for that long. Its done with state prisoners down here all the time. Or maybe they have a women's prison that's not max security and houses less violent offenders.
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Former Minnesota police officer Kim Potter, who accidentally killed Daunte Wright when she mistook her firearm for a stun gun during a traffic stop, is set to be released from prison Monday, records show.
Potter, 50, has served 16 months at the Shakopee Minnesota Correctional Facility and will serve another eight months on supervised release.
A shocking new booking photo shows the former Brooklyn Center police officer's deterioration behind bars.
Potter, a 26-year veteran, had a spotless record when the tragic mistake ruined her career and cost Wright his life.
The deadly confrontation unfolded April 11, 2021, after Wright, 20, was pulled over for expired license tags in Brooklyn Center — about 15 miles from where George Floyd was murdered in Minneapolis in 2020.
It turned out Wright had an open arrest warrant for failure to appear on a weapons charge. When Potter tried to arrest him, she believed he was attempting to flee and mistakenly drew her firearm instead of her stun gun.
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Almost like those pictures of people who do drugs. She looks like she aged about 20 years.