LOS ANGELES -- Hollywood socialite Paris Hilton was taken from a courtroom screaming and crying on Friday after a judge ordered her returned to jail to serve out her entire 45-day sentence for a parole violation in a reckless driving case.
Ok, she left screaming and crying?"It's not right!" shouted the weeping Hilton. "Mom!" she called out to her mother in the audience.
"It's not right" "Mom" See she still expected her parents to bail her out of the mess she got herself into!Hilton was brought to court in handcuffs. She came into the courtroom disheveled and weeping. Her hair was askew and she wore a gray fuzzy sweatshirt over slacks. She wore no makeup and cried throughout the hearing.
Although I don't believe they needed to escort her in handcuffs, I am surprised it took so long for her to come out of her house (from the time the sheriff's department got there) which was like a half hour without makeup and hair disheveled. You know they used that 1/2 hour to take her makeup off and mess up her hair.
Her body also shook constantly as she dabbed at her eyes. Several times she turned to her parents who were seated behind her in the courtroom and mouthed the words, "I love you."
OMG, she's acting like she's being sentenced to death for not doing anything! Superior Court Judge Michael Sauer was calm but apparently irked by developments of the morning. He said he left the courthouse last night having signed an order for Hilton to appear for the hearing.
Sauer said that when he got in his car early Friday, he heard a radio report that she would not appear and that he had approved a telephonic hearing. He said no such thing had been approved by him.
The judge said of the decision to release Hilton from jail after three days, "I at no time condoned the actions of the sheriff and at no time told him I approved the actions."
After swarming Hilton's home, the news media was waiting for her arrival outside of a downtown courthouse where Sauer listened to the city attorney's complaint that the county sheriff did not have the right to reassign her to electronically monitored home detention because of an undisclosed illness.
I believe the judge feels that she has tried to make of fool of him and the judicial system with all her (I'm sure at the advice of her mentors and such) tactics of trying to get off on this sentence from the very begining.