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08-07-2008, 09:00 AM
link (http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080807/NEWS01/80807034)

Judge orders Kilpatrick to jail
Giles unmoved by mayor's apology

By M.L. ELRICK • Free Press Staff Writer • August 7, 2008


Judge Ronald Giles just sent Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick to jail moments after the mayor pleaded for forgiveness and admitted he made an unauthorized trip to Windsor on city business.
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"The first day you were before me, I thought I made it clear to you that this court comes first in everything," Giles said. "I do understand that you're under...pressure...but I have to look at how the system should be run and perceived by the public."

"At the beginning of this case you were given every privilege that could be given to you with regard to travel," Giles said, adding that he later imposed restrictions after learning Kilpatrick had been abusing his privileges.

"At that time I made it perfectly clear ... don't come back ... ," he said.

Court officials said Kilpatrick would remain in jail until he either posts the full $75,000 bond or until his lawyers can persuade a Wayne County Circuit Court judge to overturn the decision. But first, Kilpatrick would be taken to the 36th District Court detention area.

Giles’ jailing of Kilpatrick leaves no clear line of authority in who is running the city because there currently is no deputy mayor. Anthony Adams has temporarily relinquished his deputy mayor duties to be the interim director of the Water and Sewerage Department, and Kilpatrick said at the time of that announcement that chief of staff Kandia Milton and chief operating officer Cathy Square would divide up Adams’ deputy mayor duties.

The charter provides that in the “absence or temporary disability” of the mayor that the deputy mayor is the acting mayor.

Giles' comments came after Kilpatrick told the judge he had been living under incredible pressure for the past 7 months.

"I don't believe that there is a person that's ever been through this process that respects it more than I do," Kilpatrick said, referring to the legal proceedings stemming from the eight felonies ranging from conspiracy to perjury to misconduct in office to obstruction of justice filed against him in March.

"Last week was a tremendous wake-up call to me," he said, referring to Giles' rebuke last month after he allegedly assaulted law enforcement officials trying to serve a subpoena.

Kilpatrick admitted violating the terms of his bond by traveling to Windsor without notifying the court. He said he was sorry.

"My life has been revolutionarily transformed and it's transforming in front of the eye of these media people who don't know me at all," he said, referring to what he called intense scrutiny. "Your honor, I ask for your forgiveness...it will never happen again."

He said his sons were watching these proceedings because he asked them to. "I told them that I did something wrong," he said.

Kilpatrick further said he was not "frolicking" in Windsor but trying to make a deal that would let him avoid laying off more than a thousand city workers.

"I apologize to the citizens as well, but mostly to you. It was never an affront to you," he said of the trip.

Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor Robert Moran said the mayor's pleas rung hollow.

"Now that he's caught, he's taking responsibility...he thought he got away with it," Moran said.

Prosecutors had argued before Kilpatrick addressed the court that the mayor was not taking the case against him seriously.

"The defendant left the state of Michigan, left the country, without prior notice to the court," Moran said, referring to a recent trip to Windsor. "All you have to have him do is call me...he has my cell phone, he can call me anytime...we would never say the mayor of Detroit cannot travel for an emergency matter."

Moran said he found out about the trip from the media.

"That is a flagrant violation of this court's order," Moran said. "At the very least we are going to ask the court to cut off all travel to the defendant...for business or personal, because he violated the very generous terms that this court has set up."

"It's not serious to him that he's a criminal defendant," he added.

Kilpatrick attorney James Thomas acknowledged that the mayor violated the terms of his bond, but said it was an emergency.

"Who was dying?" Giles asked.

"The City of Detroit was sick," Thomas said, adding that the mayor was trying to save a $75 million deal that would help balance Detroit's budget.

Last month, Giles put new restrictions on Kilpatrick's travel after Wayne County law enforcement officials accused him of assaulting them as they tried to serve a subpoena. The judge also revoked the mayor's personal recognizance bond and required him to post $7,500 cash to remain free.

acptulsa
08-07-2008, 09:07 AM
Do people want responsible leadership in this nation or just more entertaining clowns in suits?

Perry
08-07-2008, 10:13 AM
I was wondering how a guy like this gets elected? Did he pull the wool over everyone's eyes? Did he play the victim and state that he was going to stand up for all the other victims? How did he ever get to be Mayor?

Cowlesy
08-07-2008, 10:15 AM
I haven't heard a good word from any Detroit people I know about Kwame Kilpatrick.

The again, I don't know anyone who'd want to be mayor of Detroit.

Kludge
08-07-2008, 10:19 AM
There is actually a lot of rumor that Kilpatrick won his second term by election rigging...

No1ButPaul08
08-07-2008, 10:23 AM
There can't possibly be a worse mayor in the country than Kwame Kilpatrick

acptulsa
08-07-2008, 10:26 AM
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showpost.php?p=1599681&postcount=84

Kludge
08-07-2008, 10:31 AM
There can't possibly be a worse mayor in the country than Kwame Kilpatrick

In Hillsdale, the people wanted Change, so they elected a teenager with no experience (over a long-standing, experienced and well-liked mayor) who was soon arrested for abusing his position for marijuana trafficking.


Whims of the majority FTL