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Jun 23, 2009
Chris Brown’s Day Of Reckoning Ends In Probation, No Jail Time
Convicted Felon

So … we all prolly know by now that Chris Brown managed to work out a plea bargain in court yesterday that resulted in his conviction on felony assault against his ex-girlfriend Rihanna (who was also in court yesterday, apparently ready to tell her side of the story to the court). His punishment? 5 years probation and 180 days of “hard labor” cleaning up the streets of his home State of Virginia. I understand that this is a typical sentence for first time offenders of assault … which kinda sickens me. The court system is basically saying that you can assault a person of your choosing and only face probation and street cleaning as punishment. But I digress. Here are photos of both Chris Brown and Rihanna in court yesterday and a full rundown of the day’s events:


With Rihanna set to break her silence in her assault case, Chris Brown reached a plea agreement that spared him jail time, it was announced Monday. Brown, 20, will be sentenced to five years probation and 180 days of community labor to be served in Virginia. He will also complete a year of domestic violence classes, and pay fines. In exchange, he pleaded guilty to felony assault by means likely to cause great bodily injury. “Mr. Brown, I think it’s commendable that you took responsibility for your conduct,” said Superior Court Judge Patricia Schnegg. Brown also was ordered to stay at least 50 yards away from Rihanna – except at industry events, when it’s 10 yards – despite a request from Rihanna’s lawyer for a less-restrictive order. For now, Brown was also ordered not to have any contact with her, which includes by phone, email or text. “He’s very thankful to all the people who’ve been very supportive,” said Brown’s attorney, Mark Geragos. “This is a kid who’s never been in trouble before, who wants to move past this and make sure that the message gets out that these kinds of things, of domestic violence, are not acceptable. And that he has accepted responsibility and continues to do so and embraces this as an opportunity for him to get his life back on track and his career back on track.” If he violates probation, Brown will face four years in prison. His formal sentencing is set for Aug. 5, when the court will drop a second charge of making criminal threats. Noting that Brown pleaded to a felony, Schnegg said, “I want Mr. Brown to be treated the same as any other defendant who would come into this court. That means something like Caltrans [trash pickup] or graffiti removal.” Brown had been charged with two felony counts – assault and making criminal threats – in the alleged fight that left Rihanna bruised and bloodied. The plea deal was reached shortly before Rihanna, 21, was to testify under subpoena in a preliminary hearing. Brown, wearing gray suit, off-white tie, and matching handkerchief in his front pocket, entered the courtroom shortly after 1:30 p.m. About 10 of his friends and family, including his mother, were seated in the audience.


After the judge addressed him, Brown left the courtroom and Rihanna, wearing a black dress and pearls, was brought in for the judge to explain the plea deal terms to the singer. The two were never in the courtroom at the same time. She stood before Judge Schnegg who told her that the court will consider reducing the stay-away order to the least-restrictive one after he’s sentenced. Rihanna’s only words in open court were: “Thank you, your honor,” before she was led out a special exit. According to a search warrant, Rihanna was assaulted during an argument that began when she read text messages from another woman on Brown’s phone as they driving in a Lamborghini in L.A. the morning before the pair were both scheduled to perform on the Grammy Awards. An enraged Brown allegedly tried to force her out of the car, hit her head against the passenger window, punched in her left eye and drove away while steering with one hand and continuing to punch her with the other, says the detective’s notes in the search warrant. As blood filled Rihanna’s mouth, Brown allegedly told her, “I’m going to beat the shit out of you when we get home. You wait and see!” Rihanna then pretended to call her assistant and left a fake message saying, “I am on my way home. Make sure the cops are there when I get there.” The police notes say that prompted Brown to reply: “You just did the stupidest thing ever. Now I’m really going to kill you.”

I guess I’m kinda disgusted that the ruling judge commended Chris Brown for “taking responsibility” for his actions. If he had truly taken responsibility, he would’ve turned himself into cops months ago, admitted his crimes and served a real punishment for assault. What really happened was that his hot shot lawyer managed to work out a deal where Brown only got a slap on the wrists for his felonious actions. I suppose at this point we are to hope that Brown has learned his lesson and will stay out of trubs for the rest of his life. Should he violate his probation in any way in the next 5 years, I believe he will be slapped with a more substantial punishment. In the end, I suppose we should be glad that all of this drama is over. My hope is that Rihanna can move forward from all of this in a healthy manner. Let’s not forget, she is the victim in all of this … whether she chooses to believe it or not.

[Photo credit: Splash News; Source]

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51 Comments. Add Yours

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  1. GoHogs says:

    @GirlieGirl – Nope, I’m not violent at all, unlike your boy Chris Brown, who, by the way, STILL isn’t going to call you and ask you out for defending him.

  2. GirlieGirl says:

    @GoHogs – ok, really last one… now that the name calling has been set aside.

    I can understand your anger towards him because of your past and present life experiences. I was initially angry at him too.
    I just hope you can understand that based on who I am and my life experiences, it would pain me to see another young, black man (one that looks like my lil cousin in fact) written off and/or put in jail over something that I sincerely hope to be his first and only offense.

  3. m says:

    sorry this is off topic but rihanna has a really long neck

  4. Nat Lancaster says:

    Did anyone catch what the judge said to Rhianna? He told her she had to stay away from Chris Brown also. He said that she could go to jail if she tried to go near him also. I think there was more to this than we are all aware of.

  5. GoHogs says:

    @GirlieGirl – okay, truce. My personal experiences with domestic abuse make me really hesitant to believe this was the first time he’s ever beaten a woman bloody, nor do I believe it will be the last time. Men who hit generally keep on hitting until someone stops them, and it really aggravates me (more than it should, I admit) to read messages from people saying HE’S the victim, blaming Rhianna or just defending him in general. I’m not mad at you, honestly. I am mad at people who enable violent people by sugar-coating their offenses, just as so many have done with Chris Brown. He deserved a LOT more than he got, and I worry about the message this is sending to other young men and women in this situation. Let’s just agree to disagree and leave it at that. I apologize for the name-calling and I truly mean that.

  6. [...] Chris Brown’s Day Of Reckoning Ends In Probation, No Jail Time (pinkisthenewblog.com) [...]

  7. GirlieGirl says:

    @GoHogs – Aw, that was too much of a touching post to not respond. ;-)
    I get that… I sincerely do. Who can’t help but LOVE that you’re one of those men that is not only against domestic abuse, but takes it to heart.
    My *ahem* girls got into a convo about how WE can sometimes act out of pocket. NOBODY should hit… but that’s how some of us grew up.
    I don’t ever want you to think that I want to blame the victim… just understand how a situation might have gotten out of control for both of them.
    Anyways, peace to you and we can continue to agree that Chris deserved to be punished but disagree on the severity for sure…. and I’ll continue to hope and pray that Chris doesn’t squander the chance that I am still glad he got.

    Thanks for this post though. It really helped me understand more where you are coming from.

  8. GoHogs says:

    @GirlieGirl – Right back atcha, GG. We’re all on the same side in the big picture. Peace 2 U, 2!

  9. QTPie says:

    @GirlieGirl & GoHogs – Thank GOD you two have made up! For a while there it was like my parents were still married!

  10. dw says:

    While I agree with you that this isn’t what should have happened, it is unfortunately what does happen. Assault is generally not looked at as a serious crime, and, at least in NY, where I work in a prosecutor’s office, people charged with assault (unless it’s first degree, which is rare) almost never serve jail time. It’s sad, but you have to understand that this is the way *everyone* is treated, whether or not they have a “hot shot” lawyer. Brown didn’t get special treatment.

    I know everyone always wants to “lock up” the criminals, no matter what the crime is, but if you saw the sheer number of people with criminal convictions, you’d be shocked. There just isn’t enough room in the prison system for even the violent offenders we have now, much less offenders with less serious convictions.

    I hate what he did, and I’ve dedicated my life to helping victims of domestic violence. But unfortunately, we have to work within the system as it exists, and this sort of thing is unbelievably common.

  11. Apples v 2 says:

    Needless to say, VERY SURPRISED at how people feel sympathy towards Chris Brown.

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