All the guy did was contribute too much money ($20,000) to a political campaign:
The government charged Mr. D’Souza with illegally arranging to have two people — an employee and a woman with whom he was romantically involved — donate $10,000 each to the campaign of an old friend from Dartmouth College, Wendy E. Long, with the understanding that he would reimburse them in cash for their contributions. Ms. Long was challenging Senator Kirsten E. Gillibrand, a Democrat.AND NOW THERE'S THIS:
NYPost: ‘Arrogant’ Dinesh D’Souza has to do way more community service than he thought
Powerhouse defense attorney Ben Brafman was surprised when Manhattan federal court Judge Richard Berman clarified the sentence he handed down after D’Souza pleaded guilty last year, which means D’Souza will have to do over 1,600 hours more service than he initially thought.
“We’re talking about five years of eight hours a week? …
PLUS
On May 31, he was released from nightly detention at a work-release center in San Diego after eight months. During that time, in fulfillment of his community service requirement, he taught English once a week to Spanish-speaking applicants for American citizenship. Berman ruled Monday he must continue for another four years the community-service portion of his sentence.
WND: Dem judge orders psych counseling for D’Souza
“I only insisted on psychological counseling as part of Mr. D’Souza’s sentence because I wanted to be helpful,” the judge explained. “I am requiring Mr. D’Souza to see a new psychological counselor and to continue the weekly psychological consultation not as part of his punishment or to be retributive.
...The judge noted the psychologists “chart indicates Mr. D’Souza tends to deny problems, that he lacks insight into his own behavior, that he is arrogant and intolerant of the feelings of others, while projecting an overly positive image of himself.”
“Therefore, I am ordering Mr. D’Souza to continue psychological counseling with another therapist,” said Berman.
2 comments:
WC,
Are we next?
If we gain notoriety and a following, yes.
Supporting conservative causes is so incomprehensible to the judge, it can only be rooted in a mental disorder. Let's get D'Souza's mind right.
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