Judge order Paris Hilton to court!

sara1981

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i found out on the news by my computer says heir Paris Hilton will going back to court after jail release.

Paris Hilton ordered to return to court
Paris Hilton ordered to return to court - Yahoo! News

LOS ANGELES -Paris Hilton's release from jail may be short lived. Hours after she was sent home under house arrest Thursday for an undisclosed medical condition, the judge who put her in jail for violating her reckless-driving probation ordered her into court to decide if she should go back behind bars.

Hilton must report to court at 9 a.m. Friday, Superior Court spokesman Allan Parachini told The Associated Press.

"My understanding is she will be brought in in a sheriff's vehicle from her home," Parachini said.

The celebrity inmate was sent home from the Los Angeles County jail's Lynwood lockup shortly after 2 a.m. in a stunning reduction to her original 45-day sentence. She had reported to jail Sunday night after attending the MTV Movie Awards in a strapless designer dress.

She was ordered to finish her sentence under house arrest, meaning she could not leave her four-bedroom, three-bath home in the Hollywood Hills until next month.

City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo complained that he learned of her release the same way as almost everyone else — through news reports.

Then, late Thursday, he filed a petition questioning whether Sheriff Lee Baca should be held in contempt of court for releasing Hilton — and demanding that she be held in custody. Superior Court Judge Michael T. Sauer's decision to haul Hilton back to the courtroom came shortly after.

"It is the city attorney's position that the decision on whether or not Ms. Hilton should be released early and placed on electronic monitoring should be made by Judge Sauer and not the Sheriff's Department," said Jeffrey Isaacs of the city attorney's office.

Sauer himself had expressed his unhappiness with Hilton's release before Delgadillo asked him to return her to court. When he sentenced Hilton to jail last month, he ruled specifically that she could not serve her sentence at home under electronic monitoring.

Delgadillo's office indicated that it would argue that the Sheriff's Department violated Sauer's May 4 sentencing order.

As word spread earlier Thursday that the 26-year-old poster child for bad celebrity behavior was back home, radio helicopter pilots who normally report on traffic conditions were dispatched to hover over her house and describe it to morning commuters. Paparazzi photographers on the ground quickly assembled outside its gates.

Hilton herself kept a low profile, although late in the morning a man arrived outside her house with a supply of cupcakes he said she had instructed him to distribute to the media horde.

Her parents also arrived and briefly entered, then left, the home.

Shortly before noon, Hilton issued a statement through her attorney.

"I want to thank the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department and staff of the Century Regional Detention Center for treating me fairly and professionally," she said. "I am going to serve the remaining 40 days of my sentence. I have learned a great deal from this ordeal and hope that others have learned from my mistakes."

Attorneys differed on whether her treatment was unusual.

"She would have gotten out early if she was plain Jane," said Leonard Levine, who has handled numerous probation violation cases. He noted that overcrowding in the Los Angeles County jail system has led to thousands of nonviolent offenders serving only 10 percent of their sentences. "She did as much time as a normal person would have done."

Loyola University law professor Laurie Levenson said that she suspected the deal for Hilton's early release was in the works even before she entered the jail system — and that officials probably were anxious to get her out of their custody.

"The time and resources needed to take care of a Paris Hilton are huge," she said. "They have to make sure she is safe and her medical needs are attended to. Everything they did was going to be looked at under a microscope."

Levine said that with rewards being offered for pictures of Hilton in custody, jail officials would have had to monitor the cell phone cameras of every employee.

Rene Seidel of the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services said he had "never heard of" an inmate being released from jail for a medical condition.

Inmates with a cold are sent to a jail clinic, he said, and the seriously ill go to the jail ward of the Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center.

Hilton's path to jail began Sept. 7, when she failed a sobriety test after police saw her weaving down a Hollywood street in her Mercedes-Benz on what she said was a late-night run to a hamburger stand.

She pleaded no contest to reckless driving and was sentenced to 36 months' probation, alcohol education and $1,500 in fines.

In the months that followed she was stopped twice by officers who discovered her driving on a suspended license. The second stop landed her in Sauer's courtroom, where he sentenced her to jail.
 
Paris Hilton must return to court
BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Paris Hilton must return to court

A Los Angeles judge has ordered Paris Hilton to appear in court on Friday morning to determine whether she should be returned to jail.
The celebrity heiress was allowed to leave jail on Thursday, only three days into a 45-day sentence for violating probation on a drink-driving ban.

She was given an electronic tag and ordered to remain under house arrest for the remainder of her sentence.

Her release on unspecified medical grounds sparked widespread criticism.

She is due in court at 0900 (1600GMT) on Friday, where Judge Michael Sauer, who sentenced her to jail at her trial in early May, will hear the case.

Jurisdiction row

The office of the Los Angeles City Attorney filed a petition on Thursday demanding LA's Superior Court to show why Sheriff Lee Baca should not be held in contempt of court for releasing Ms Hilton.

It also demanded that Hilton serve the rest of her sentence in jail.

"The decision whether or not Ms Hilton should be released early and placed on electronic monitoring should be made by Judge [Michael] Sauer, and not the Sheriff's Department," Jeffrey Isaacs, Chief of the LA City Attorney's Criminal Branch, said.

At the time of Hilton's release, Steve Whitmore, of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said: "After extensive consultation with medical personnel, it was decided this reassignment should be done."

No details of the medical problem could be given for "privacy reasons", he said, but insisted she had received no special treatment.

Civil rights leader Rev Al Sharpton condemned the release as showing the "double standards" of the US legal system.

"This early release gives all of the appearances of economic and racial favouritism that is constantly cited by poor people and people of colour," he said. "There are any number of cases of people who handle being incarcerated badly and even have health conditions that are not released."

But New York civil liberties lawyer E Christopher Murray said house arrest was a more appropriate sentence for a celebrity.

"Sentencing Paris to jail for an extended period of time was an example of a celebrity being treated more harshly than an average person," he said.

Monitoring ban

Hilton's full sentence - including the house arrest - has now reverted to the original 45 days.

Mr Whitmore said she had officially served five days in jail - including late on Sunday night and the early hours of Thursday morning - meaning 40 days of house arrest would complete the sentence.

When Hilton was originally sentenced to 45 days for violating probation on a drink-driving conviction, she was told there was no prospect of early release.

Judge Sauer had also specifically ruled that she could not serve her sentence at home under electronic monitoring.

The socialite and pop singer was arrested for driving under the influence last September and was given probation, which she violated several times by driving with a suspended licence.

She was held at the Century Regional Detention Centre in Lynwood, California, where her lawyer said she spent 23 hours a day in a solitary cell.

She was separated from the main prison population in a special unit for celebrities, public officials, police officers and other high-profile inmates.

After her first night in jail, her lawyer said she was doing well and would "reflect on her life, to see what she can do to make the world better".
 
oh oh... that mean Judge might send her back behind bars...

I hope Judge doesn't see green, but seek justice.
 
Free! Tagged Paris Hilton released after just three days in jail
Free! Tagged Paris Hilton released after just three days in jail | the Daily Mail

Paris Hilton will wake up this morning in her £10,000 mirrored four-poster bed after being released from prison just 72 hours into her 23-day sentence.

Fears that the hotel heiress was on the brink of a mental breakdown reportedly spurred the decision by officials to cut short her stay at LA's tough women's jail.

She struck a deal that she would serve 45 days of home detention rather than the 23 nights she would have spent in jail. That falls to 40 days because of the time she has already spent in prison.

She will no longer have to wear the standard issue orange prison jumpsuit. The only memento she will retain from her time behind bars is an extra item of jewellery - an electronic ankle bracelet to ensure she doesn't stray from her £3million mansion in the Hollywood Hills.

Last night Hilton released a statement thanking LA sheriff's department and the jail "for treating me fairly and professionally".

She added: "I am going to serve the remaining 40 days of my sentence."

But critics blasted the "celebrity justice" and insisted she was only set free because she is famous.

Hilton, 26, was locked up for driving her Bentley without a licence, which was a violation of her probation terms for a drink-driving offence. At her sentencing, the judge insisted she should not receive any special treatment.

Yet after only three days inside, she was allowed to leave the Century Regional Centre in Lynwood in the early hours of yesterday following two visits from her Beverly Hills psychiatrist Dr Charles Sophy.

She was driven home by her lawyer after securing the agreement that she would remain under house arrest.

LA sheriff's department spokesman Steve Whitmore said that Sunday - when Hilton spent most of the evening at the MTV Movie Awards before checking into jail after 10.30pm - and yesterday, when she was released before 1am, were both counted as days off her total 45-day punishment.

He said Hilton was allowed to go home after "extensive consultations with medical personnel over three or four days".

He refused to reveal details, but Hilton - who had been in isolation for her own safety - had been heard crying hysterically on the prison payphone, complaining she hadn't been able to eat or sleep and that her 12ft x 8ft cell was "freezing cold".

One report suggested she had "cracked under the pressure of prison". Citing sources close to Hilton's family, the TV show Entertainment Tonight reported on its website that she had developed a rash on her body.

Los Angeles County detention facilities, like many jails around the U.S., are known to have problems controlling outbreaks of staphylococcus infections, which can cause rashes.

But Mr Whitmore said this was not an issue in Hilton's case.

He denied the socialite had been given special treatment, but equal rights campaigners claimed prison officials had been "played like a puppet on a string" by Hilton and her legal team.

Al Sharpton, firebrand civil rights leader, said: "There are any number of cases of people who handle being incarcerated badly and even have health conditions that are not released.

"This act smacks of the double standards that many of us raise."

Steve Remige, president of the Association of Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs, said: "There appears to have been preferential treatment. On any given day, a thousand female inmates are in custody.

"Why is one case, out of the blue, treated any different to them?"

The ankle bracelet will alert police if Hilton tries to leave her home. If she does so without permission, she will be hauled back in front of the judge and her sentence will be doubled.
 
Paris Hilton released after 3 days in prison
Paris Hilton released after 3 days in prison | International News | News | Telegraph

Hotel heiress Paris Hilton has been released from prison for medical reasons after serving just three days of her 45-day sentence.

Steve Whitmore of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's office said the 26-year-old had been "reassigned" though he refused to give any more details.

Hilton will have to wear an electronic monitoring device on her ankle and will be confined to her home for the 40 remaining days of her sentence

"With extensive consultation with medical personnel it was decided this reassignment should be done," Mr Whitmore told reporters in Los Angeles.

He said her time in jail techically totalled five days because she arrived just before midnight on Sunday night and left just after midnight this morning.

The hotel heiress checked into the Century Regional Detention Facility in suburban Los Angeles on Sunday to serve an expected 23 days for violating probation in an alcohol-related reckless driving case.

She was originally sentenced to 45 days in jail, but that was reduced because of jail overcrowding.

The evening before she was jailed, Ms Hilton made a surprise appearance at the MTV Movie Awards, where she worked the red carpet in a strapless designer gown.

During her stay, she was held in a special unit where she was spending 23 hours a day in a solitary cell, her lawyer, Richard Hutton, said.

After her first night in jail, Mr Hutton said Hilton was doing well under the circumstances.

Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said Hilton's demeanour was helpful when she started her sentence.

"She was focused, she was co-operative," he said.

The star of The Simple Life reality TV show pleaded no contest to a reckless driving charge in January and was sentenced to 36 months' probation.

When she was later pulled over by the California Highway Patrol, Hilton was told that she was driving on a suspended licence and signed a document acknowledging she was not to drive.

She was then pulled over by sheriff's deputies on February 27 and charged with violating probation.
 
Paris Hilton has been released
The Sun Online - Bizarre: Paris Hilton has been released

PARIS HILTON has been released from jail - as I told you this morning.
She left Los Angeles Century Regional Detention Facility after serving just three days.

Sheriff’s Department spokesman Steve Whitmore said the hotel heiress had been fitted with an ankle bracelet and would be under house arrest for the next 40 days.

To read a press release from the jail click HERE.

To see a video of Steve Whitmore's statement, click here

He said her release was "for medical reasons", but details were not given due to US privacy laws.

He added: "I cannot specifically talk about the medical situation other than to say that yes, it played a part in this."

The Sheriff's Department claimed this approach has been used with other inmates in the past.

Steve confirmed: "This is certainly not unprecedented and happens from time to time."

He then denied accusations that Paris received special treatment inside and said she would be unable to go to parties or socialise for the time the ankle bracelet remains on.

The house arrest is termed "re-assignment", as she is technically still serving her sentence.

Steve said as she arrived at midnight on Sunday and left after midnight on Tuesday (US time) this counts as five days served out of her original 45 day sentence.

Although by most people's count she has only been inside for three days.

I brought you the news that Paris was set to be released hours ago.

She will be able to move around in her home in a space about 3,000 to 4,000 square feet but no further during that time.

The socialite, 26, surrendered herself to the prison just before midnight on Sunday (local time) after attending the glitzy MTV movie awards.

Paparazzi photographers and TV crews were swarming round the jail from around 11pm local time on Wednesday (7am Thursday UK time) hoping to catch the socialite leaving.

She left just after midnight and was officially re-assigned at 2.09am.

During her stay, she was held in a special unit where she was spending 23 hours a day in a solitary cell, her lawyer, Richard Hutton, said.

After her first night in jail, Mr Hutton said Hilton was doing well under the circumstances.

Whitmore said Hilton’s demeanour was helpful.

“She was focused, she was co-operative,” he said.

Paris cried herself to sleep during her stint behind bars.

Keep checking here for more breaking Paris news.
 
L.A. City Attorney Condemns Paris Hilton Transfer
L.A. City Attorney Condemns Paris Hilton Transfer - Paris Hilton : People.com

A day after Paris Hilton was reassigned to house arrest, prosecutors will ask a court to force her back behind bars.

Hilton, 26, is required to appear for a 9:00 a.m. hearing on Friday, where she will face Judge Michael T. Sauer – the judge who initially sentenced her to 45 days in jail.

The last-minute hearing was requested by Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo, who will ask the court to order the Sheriff's Department to return Hilton to jail.

Prosecutors have also asked the court to force the Sheriff's Department to explain why it should not be held in contempt of court for allegedly violating Judge Sauer's original May 4 sentence, which forbade electronic home monitoring.

Earlier on Thursday, the L.A. Superior Court clarified that Judge Sauer did not authorize Hilton's release from jail. Court spokesman Allan Parachini said the Sheriff's Department acted unilaterally by releasing Hilton and that it "can override a judge's sentencing order, it happens all the time."

Sheriff Lee Baca, who ultimately approved Hilton's reassignment to home arrest, "was in his legal jurisdiction to do so," Parachini said.

On Thursday morning, shortly after Hilton's reassignment was announced, Delgadillo, whose department handled Hilton's probation violation case, blasted the Sheriff's Department's decision.

"Today I was extremely troubled to learn that the Sheriff's Department has decided to release Ms. Hilton from custody just three days after she was admitted to county jail," Delgadillo said in a statement Thursday.

"Had we been provided with the proper notification, we would have opposed the decision on legal grounds."

Delgadillo added that he found the release on medical grounds "puzzling" since he says L.A. County jails are "well-equipped" to deal with inmate medical situations.

"I am also concerned that the judicial process may have been improperly circumvented in this case," Delgadillo continued. "I have directed my criminal branch to immediately explore all possible legal options to ensure that the law is being applied equally and justly in this case."

The chief prosecutor added that only the judge had the power to modify the conditions of her sentence.

"If law enforcement officials are to enjoy the respect of those we are charged with protecting, we cannot tolerate a two-tiered jail system where the rich and powerful receive special treatment," Delgadillo concluded. "We must ensure that in our city, in our nation, and under our Constitution, justice remains blind."
 
Paris Hilton Released to Her Home
Paris Hilton Released to Her Home - Paris Hilton : People.com

Due to an undisclosed "medical condition," Paris Hilton has been reassigned from jail to her home, where she will wear an electronic monitoring device.

"She was not released, she was reassigned," Los Angeles County Sheriff's Dept. spokesperson Steve Whitmore said at a press conference Thursday.

In a statement released to TMZ.com by Hilton's lawyer, the heiress said Thursday: "I want to thank the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department and staff of the Century Regional Detention Center for treating me fairly and professionally.

"I am going to serve the remaining 40 days of my sentence. I have learned a great deal from this ordeal and hope that others have learned from my mistakes."

At the press conference, Whitmore provided few other details about Hilton's medical condition, citing privacy laws, and declined to say whether it was physical or psychological, or whether it related in any way to reports that Hilton had been miserable behind bars.

Whitmore also did not know whether the condition was pre-existing, but said the decision to reassign Hilton was made after "extensive consultation" with medical personnel.

He did say that she did not have a staph infection, responding to reports that the facility had experienced a staph outbreak.

Hilton was transferred shortly after midnight on Thursday, Whitmore said. "She was transported out of here by us, there was a transference to her attorney, and then she was taken home." Asked how her spirits were, he replied: "She was ... focused, let's put it that way."

As a result of the reassignment to her home, Whitmore said, Hilton's original 45-day sentence has been reinstated. In essence, this "nearly doubles her sentence" in terms of days, he pointed out, as she had been expected to serve 23 days behind bars with good behavior.

If she violates the terms of the reassignment, he added, "she will be remanded immediately to the court. ... The judge made it clear that that would be an automatic bump-up to 90 days."

Hilton has been credited with five days of time served and will spend the remaining 40 days confined to her home wearing an ankle bracelet with a range of 3,000-4,000 square feet.

Asked whether she would be confined completely, Whitmore said: "There's some fudge with that. If someone goes and gets their mail, if they're 30 minutes outside, that's okay. It's a complicated electronic situation."

Whitmore said that leeway would not extend to parties or events. "Here's my understanding: She's confined to her home with an ankle bracelet. She cannot leave that facility," he said.

Hilton will remain at her Hollywood Hills mansion, which includes a swimming pool, a large kitchen with a marble island, two living rooms – one of which has a stripper pole installed – and portraits of the heiress on the wall.

Whitmore said the sheriff's department is not concerned with appearing to be soft on the celebrity inmate. "It doesn't matter how we look, really," he said. "We just hopefully do our job and do it professionally, with a sense of humanity."

TMZ.com reported Thursday morning that Hilton had been released early Thursday.

Hilton, 26, began her sentence Sunday night at the Century Regional Detention Facility in Lynwood, south of Los Angeles.

She was sentenced to 45 days in jail for violating her probation by driving with a suspended license. Amid speculation that she would actually serve much less time due to prison overcrowding, police said she would spend at least 23 days behind bars.
 
Outrage: Sharpton Bashes Paris Transfer
Outrage: Sharpton Bashes Paris Transfer - Paris Hilton : People.com

The Rev. Al Sharpton delivered a rebuke to the California justice system for allowing Paris Hilton to leave jail and serve her sentence at home, saying the move reveals a dangerous double standard.

"This early release gives all the appearances of economic and racial favoritism that is constantly cited by poor people and people of color," the civil-rights leader and president of National Action Network said Thursday, according to the Drudge Report. "There are any number of cases of people who handle being incarcerated badly and even have health conditions that are not released."

Sharpton said he has "nothing but empathy for Ms. Hilton," pointing out that he appeared with her on Saturday Night Live in 2003. But he said the decision to transfer her from a Los Angeles County prison to her own home, where she will be under house arrest, is unconscionable.

"I have served several sentences for civil rights and civil disobedience actions and I even fasted, which caused health concerns to prison authorities who paid for a doctor to come see me daily rather than release me," Sharpton said. "This act smacks of the double standards that many of us raise."

Sharpton was not alone in condemning Hilton's transfer, as many pundits took to the cable-news shows Thursday afternoon to voice their outrage over the decision.

Even the women of The View weighed in on the move Thursday morning. While Elisabeth Hasselbeck said she found it "disgusting," Barbara Walters said, "I'm happy for Paris and I'm happy for her family" and guest host Lorraine Bracco admitted, "I'm so conflicted."

The studio audience, however, was unanimous. When Walters said, "I ask you very quickly, raise hands or shout out: Are you glad that Paris Hilton is reassigned to her home?" the crowd shouted in unison, "No!" Asked Walters, "Do you think it was the right thing to do?" Again: "No!" (See the video below.)

One man who did not seem upset in the least, however, was boxing promoter Don King. According to TMZ.com, King called the Web site's offices on Thursday morning to say he was "ecstatic" about the news. "I love Paris Hilton, and I'm just delighted, ecstatic that she's out of jail," King says in the audio message. King said he has not met Hilton, but he knows her family, and he said the heiress is "what America is all about – people that stand out from the crowd."

King added that he is looking forward to giving Hilton a hug and "telling her I love her."
 
Paris jail stay is not over yet
Paris jail stay is not over yet | NEWS.com.au

PARIS Hilton has been ordered to appear in court for a hearing on whether she should be returned to jail, media reports say.

A court spokesman said Hilton, who was released from jail today after serving three days of her three-week sentence, will appear in a Los Angeles court tomorrow.

Hilton's early release from jail has sparked outrage over special treatment for Hollywood's rich and famous.

Hilton, who turned herself in late Sunday night, was released from jail for medical reasons, is confined to her West Hollywood home with an electronic ankle bracelet for 40 days.

Steve Whitmore of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's office declined to specify the medical issue that led to her “reassignment” or say why she could not be treated in jail. TV show Entertainment Tonight reported that Hilton had developed a rash on her body.

"Learnt a great deal"

Hilton, who was jailed for for violating her probation in an alcohol-related reckless driving case, released a statement thanking the sheriff's department and jail personnel "for treating me fairly and professionally".

"I am going to serve the remaining 40 days of my sentence. I have learned a great deal from this ordeal and hope that others have learned from my mistakes," she said.

Authorities under fire

Los Angeles authorities were under fire for letting Hilton off easy.

"On any given day, a thousand female inmates are in custody. Why is one case, out of the blue, treated any different than them?" Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs' Association president Steve Remige said.

Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo called for the law to be applied "equally and justly"

"I have directed my criminal branch to immediately explore all possible legal options to ensure that the law is being applied equally and justly in this case," he said.

Home comforts

Hilton, a symbol of privilege and American celebrity culture whose great-grandfather, Conrad, started the global Hilton Hotel empire, was taken to her house early this morning.

Hilton was originally sentenced to 45 days in jail. But her jail term was effectively cut to just 23 days under state sentencing guidelines that give inmates one day's credit for each day of incarceration.

Under the home-confinement order, her sentence was increased back to 45 days, but Mr Whitmore said she would be credited with five days incarceration, including Sunday and Thursday, even though she actually only spent three full days in jail.

The exact terms of Hilton's home confinement were not released.

No parties

One reporter described Hilton's job as going to parties and events and asked if she would be allowed to leave her home for work, just as lifestyle media star Martha Stewart could during her five months under house arrest for insider trading.

“My understanding is that she's confined to her home with an ankle bracelet, she cannot leave that facility,” Mr Whitmore said.

“She will fulfill the remainder of her time confined to her home.”

Hilton had been housed in a special unit for celebrities and high-profile inmates at the Century Regional Detention Facility in Lynwood, about 24km from Los Angeles.

She had been incarcerated alone in her cell, an enclosure 2.4m wide, 3.7m deep and 2.4m high, equipped with two bunks, a sink, a small table, a slit window and a metal toilet.
 
Judge orders Hilton back to court
The Age: national, world, business, entertainment, sport and technology news from Melbourne's leading newspaper.

Hours after Paris Hilton was sent home under house arrest, the judge who originally put her in jail has ordered her back to court to determine whether she should be put back behind bars.

"The city attorney filed a petition for an order to show cause why the sheriff should not be held in contempt for releasing Ms Hilton, and demanded that she be held in custody,'' Superior Court spokesman Allan Parachini said late this afternoon.

"My understanding is she will be brought in in a sheriff's vehicle from her home,'' Parachini said, adding that although Hilton was at home, she was technically in custody because she was under house arrest.

He said Hilton must report to court at 9am tomorrow (3am Saturday AEST).

The latest twist in the Hilton prison saga comes after outrage followed the celebrity party girl's release from prison today, three days into her 45-day sentence.

Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department spokesman Steve Whitmore said there were "medical reasons" behind the decision and stressed she had not been set free, but rather "re-assigned' to serve her sentence at home wearing an electronic tag.

"Paris Hilton has been fitted for an ankle bracelet and put under house arrest, after authorities determined to release Hilton from prison due to medical reasons," Whitmore said.

"After extensive consultation with medical personnel included doctors here at the CDRF (jail), it was determined that Paris Hilton would be re-assigned to our community-based alternative to custody, (the) electronic monitoring program," the spokesman said.

Los Angeles prosecutor Rocky Delgadillo attacked Hilton's release from prison and called for the law to be applied "equally and justly".

"I have directed my criminal branch to immediately explore all possible legal options to ensure that the law is being applied equally and justly in this case," Mr Delgadillo said.

Citing sources close to Hilton's family, the syndicated TV show Entertainment Tonight reported on its website that the health problem was a rash that she developed on her body.

Hilton released a statement thanking the sheriff's department and jail personnel "for treating me fairly and professionally".

"I am going to serve the remaining 40 days of my sentence. I have learned a great deal from this ordeal and hope that others have learned from my mistakes," she said.

The high-maintenance Hilton hotels heiress, reality TV star and model will be trading the spartan cell for her luxury West Hollywood home to serve out the rest of a 45-day sentence.

part 1
 
Judge orders Hilton back to court
The Age: national, world, business, entertainment, sport and technology news from Melbourne's leading newspaper.

She was sentenced to jail in May for driving with a suspended licence, after losing her driving privileges for an earlier drunk-driving arrest.

Hilton will now be monitored only by the signals sent from her newest fashion accessory to the Los Angeles County probation department.

Whitmore declined to elaborate on the nature of Hilton's alleged medical concerns, citing privacy rules.

"She's been fitted with an ankle bracelet. And she's been sent home. And she will be confined to her home for the next 40 days," he said.

Although Hilton spent only just over 72 hours in her cell, she would be credited with having served five days of her 45-day sentence, because she entered prison late Sunday and left very early today, Whitmore police.

But within hours of her release Los Angeles authorities were under fire for letting Hilton off easy.

"One rule for the rich and famous and different rules for everyone else," said Najee Ali, director of Project Islamic Hope.

"On any given day, a thousand female inmates are in custody. Why is one case, out of the blue, treated any different than them?" asked Steve Remige, president of the Association of Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs.

US media have revelled in the minutiae of Hilton's downward spiral from her luxury penthouse to pokey cell.

During her short stay on the inside, Hilton - who spent part of her childhood living in New York's luxurious Waldorf-Astoria hotel - reportedly ditched her blue contact lenses and bared naturally brown eyeballs.

She cleaned off her make-up, spent 23 hours a day alone, was weepy at times and declined to eat an institutionally catered hot dog, gossip website TMZ.com reported.

"Paris has been crying on the phone, saying she's not sleeping or eating. Paris says her cell is 'freezing cold'. She has three little blankets and no pillow. She's using one of the blankets as a pillow. The room is bright and jail noise echoes through her space," TMZ said.

A powerhouse on the party circuit, the lanky Hilton - widely known for her minidresses, spray-on tan, platinum hair extensions and pouty poses - rocketed to fame largely following the embarrassing release of a sex tape of her and an ex-boyfriend on the internet.

part 2
 
Paris to appear in court Friday
Paris to appear in court Friday - CNN.com

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- Hours after Paris Hilton was sent home under house arrest Thursday, the judge who put her in jail for violating her reckless-driving probation ordered her into court to determine whether she should be put back behind bars.

Hilton must report to court at 9 a.m. Friday, Superior Court spokesman Allan Parachini told The Associated Press.

"My understanding is she will be brought in in a sheriff's vehicle from her home," Parachini said. (Watch the details of Hilton's release )

Superior Court Judge Michael T. Sauer issued his order after the city attorney filed a petition late Thursday afternoon questioning whether Sheriff Lee Baca should be held in contempt of court for releasing Hilton on Thursday morning. (Blog: Is this a miscarriage of justice?)

The celebrity inmate was sent home from the Los Angeles County jail's Lynwood lockup shortly after 2 a.m. for an unspecified medical condition in a stunning reduction to her original 45-day sentence. (Watch Hilton enter jail )

She was ordered to finish her sentence under house arrest, meaning she could not leave her four-bedroom, three-bath home in the Hollywood Hills until next month.

"What transpired here is outrageous," county Supervisor Don Knabe told The Associated Press, adding that he received more than 400 angry e-mails and hundreds more phone calls from around the country.

Hilton's return home gives the impression of "celebrity justice being handed out," he said.

City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo complained that he learned of her release the same way as almost everyone else -- through news reports.

"It is the city attorney's position that the decision on whether or not Ms. Hilton should be released early and placed on electronic monitoring should be made by Judge Sauer and not the Sheriff's Department," said Jeffrey Isaacs of the city attorney's office.

Sauer himself had expressed his unhappiness with Hilton's release before Delgadillo asked him to return her to court. When he sentenced Hilton to jail last month, he ruled specifically that she could not serve her sentence at home under electronic monitoring.

Parachini said Sauer reminded the Sheriff's Department of that when he learned Hilton was about to be released.

"He reiterated the terms of his sentencing order. He did not agree to the terms of release that the sheriff proposed," Parachini told the AP before Delgadillo asked that Hilton be returned to court.

But, Parachini said at the time, it is the sheriff and not the judge who decides when inmates are released from jail.

Delgadillo's office indicated that it would argue that the Sheriff's Department violated Sauer's May 4 sentencing order.
 
Why are you use UK news? This is America and must provide about America thing. UK make BS thing to make America look bad.
 
yeah i agree and its all same news.. why post it from each newspaper? only one is simple enough... jeez.. take up too much of bandwidith... :smh:
 
Whoa... don't post too many articles, they're repetitive!
 
Well Paris needs go back to jail! She didnt finish her term, i dont care if she have mental impaired or whatever. Alot of prisoners have the same thing and they stuck in the jail and to be suffer.. So Paris have to deal with it.
 
Paris Hilton back behind bars
Paris Hilton back behind bars - USATODAY.com

Hilton sent back to jail in hysterics
Hilton sent back to jail in hysterics - News - Yahoo! TV

Paris Hilton going back to jail
Paris Hilton going back to jail - CNN.com

Paris Hilton Ordered Back to Jail
Paris Hilton Ordered Back to Jail - Paris Hilton : People.com

Paris ordered back to court as sentencing controversy grows
Paris ordered back to court as sentencing controversy grows

I told YA!

i was right she need staying in the jail! but im sure judge was smart but she never learn her lesson!
 
Sara.. everyone has net.. we can find these articles.. Just give 1 link.. and I am sure the rest of us can find more. I know you like posting multiple articles.. but please remember that most of the articles say the same thing repeatedly.
 
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