In criminal court proceedings, judges have clear jurisdictional authority to accept guilty pleas, establish factual bases for charges, and impose appropriate sentences including probation conditions, community service, and rehabilitation requirements such as mandatory attendance at support group meetings. The judge in this case demonstrated proper procedure by questioning the defendant about the factual basis of the window peeping charge, explaining potential penalties (up to 90 days in jail and $500 in fines), and ordering a pre-sentence investigation report before final sentencing.
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Judge PROVES He Has Jurisdiction Over Sovereign Citizen In The MOST SATISFYING Way Possible!!!Added:
So you understand, I'll take this under that section. I'll take your plea. I'll refer you for a present report. I'll set terms and conditions. And if you're complying at the end of the specified period that I set, the case will be dismissed. The prosecutor here says 12 to 18 months. Do you understand that?
>> He had said 12, judge. I know that I think he crossed part that said 18 out.
>> Okay. Well, I may still go 18. I may still go 12. I don't know. But okay. But uh do you understand that sir?
>> Yes.
>> All right. And you understand if you plead guilty the possible penalties are up to 500 fines, 90 days jail costs of all those. Do you understand that?
>> Yes.
>> And did the sign read and understand the advice of rights?
>> Yes.
>> To the charge of window peeping. How do you plead?
>> Guilty.
>> On January I'm sorry, November 13 at 25 at 4:37 in the morning. Were you at or near Tide Park Court in Woodh?
>> Yes. And you lived in New Boston, right?
>> Yeah.
>> And you were looking inside somebody's windows.
>> Yes.
>> At 4:30 in the morning.
>> Yes.
>> For what purpose?
>> Just be honest with me.
>> Was he intoxicated?
>> Yes.
>> Yes.
>> Well, I can't take his plea if you can't make out a factual basis.
>> Let's uh he I think he has sufficient recollection uh to be able to handle this. I was think that some of the finer details might be >> Well, he he recalls looking in the window. Uh >> why were you looking in the window?
>> I used to live there.
>> You were looking in the window. You used to live there with who?
>> My dad.
>> Who's your dad?
>> Same name >> here.
>> May I?
>> Yeah.
>> Uh so so they had previously that was an address that he had previously lived at.
So they had subsequently moved, but he found himself back at that address.
>> What were you doing? Looking in what window?
>> I'm sure.
>> You just looked in the window at 4:30 in the morning.
>> Yes.
>> Did you know the people that were living there at the time?
>> No, I thought I still >> You thought you still live there?
>> What did you consume that day?
How much alcohol or drugs or both?
>> How many? What kind?
>> Uh, >> how many? 20.
>> I can't hear you.
>> Are you on probation or parole right now? Anybody force you to plead guilty?
>> I'm going to accept your plea. I find it to be an accurate plea. May voluntarily and understandingly. Please accept it.
Does he have a drug or alcohol problem or >> he does?
>> Well, I know, but if he's drinking this much where he doesn't remember and thinks that he was living there at the time, I mean, that's kind of scary. I It's not It's not to say that I I think your honor, I I understand your concern on that. I think for from my perspective too though, it's you know, I think it's it's better or at least there's a more reasonable explanation than just walking to a random house. You know, you had previous >> I'm just saying all I'm trying to say nicely here is if he thinks he lives at a How long since you'd lived there?
>> Like two years.
>> He think he's going back to a house he hadn't lived at in two years. I mean, he's got to have he must have been seriously under the influence. That's all. Here's what I'm doing. Um, I'll accept the plea. I'll take it under uh 769. I'm not sorry, 7694A. I'll take it under the Heather statute 762.11.
Refer you for a screening and assessment.
Um, you're going to be screened and assessed today and sentenced at a later time. I want you not to go back to 191.
These are conditions of your bond. Do you understand that? I'll give you a $1,000 personal bond, but you are not to go back to 191 Hide Court in Wood Haven, not to be within two miles of there.
You're not to have any contact with the victim at all. You cannot write, phone, see, text, email, or communicate with anybody there. No alcohol, no marijuana, no illegal drugs. I do want him going to AA at least two times per week in person.
And I also want him going over to get fingerprinted and photographed today by 2 p.m. at the Wood Haven Police Department. Do you understand that, sir?
>> Yes.
>> So, you're going to get a refuel here.
You're going to get a sentence date.
Then you're going to go down the hall and pick up the sentence date on the notice. Then you're going over to probation. We're going to notify the victim. Probation will fill out a you'll fill out a questionnaire to them and be interviewed. And then you'll come back for sentence. So, why don't you give me another date, Lis? Uh, your >> honor, um, if I may. uh will will the the the screening um done by probation, will that not indicate then they make a recommendation as to whether or not he has any kind of drug or alcohol problems? I I think that if we look at just this this one incident that yes that that there are some concerning aspects of it but I don't I really honestly do not believe that he has an alcohol problem that's going to >> he drank so much he thought if one to I'm going to assume that he's been truthful and thought he was going back to his house.
That's a blackout to a blackout to a blackout. I mean, if you go back to a place you haven't lived in in 2 years and you start peeping through the windows and now you're in here telling the judge that you thought you lived there. I mean, if that isn't indicative of an alcohol problem, I don't know what is. I mean, I'll make a determination after I read the report and but he's going he's going to go to AA. If anything, I think I'm at least a couple times a week too late. Mr. Mr. Crawford, you see the AA verification there. So, we're going to hand that to you. You're going to give it to your client. He's going to go. He's going to go in person.
>> Judge, is there any way you could delay this now? He's having second thoughts about this.
>> No. Are you kidding me? What do you mean he's having second thoughts? Cuz I ordered him to go to a A. Are you kidding? There's only one or two things that happened here, son. You either were drunk out of your gourd >> or you were going over to the window peep somebody or both.
>> Yeah.
>> Hang on.
>> Listen. I don't appreciate people arguing with me.
You can disagree with me. It's okay.
Nobody's ever heard me say I'm always right. But in this instance, if I don't order what I just ordered, I'm a bum.
What you told me is true. You thought you lived there. You hadn't lived there in 2 years. Did I misunderstand something?
Did I misunderstand something?
Then you are kidding yourself.
You are kidding yourself. And it's okay.
I guess I'm not going to having second thoughts cuz he doesn't like the judge order him to go to AA twice a week or abstain from alcohol.
Which is it?
>> Well, I think it's more so about his his condition at the time as far as the knowledge of what he was actually in fact doing. That was my concern. I'm not trying to throw a wrench in the machinery at all. You've been very reasonable this morning in black perspective.
>> Well, I I I I'm not understanding though. He's looking through the windows.
He at 4:30 in the morning, which causes me to say a lot of things to myself.
I mean, I wouldn't go to my house sober even and look through the windows at 4:30 in the morning. and I'm going to walk in the door. He didn't even try to walk in the door.
I don't know what to say to you. You act like I'm sending you to jail for 90 days. This is strange.
I'll do the screening. We'll see what happens. I'm going to keep an open mind, but he's going AA. I mean, I I just cannot imagine a scenario under which I wouldn't order it. Then give me a give me a sentence date, Heather.
>> That'll be um February 4th at 9:00.
>> Is that good with you?
>> That's good with me, Ron. Well, he So, so the ending class will be done in the interim until the sentencing day.
>> Correct. Fair enough.
>> He's going to go down the hall. He's going to get his notice. He's going to get an order for Prince and he's going to get his bomb sheet. My court officer is going to hand him an AA verification.
He has to go in person. Every time he go, he ask goes, he has to have the form signed and then he'll come back for sentencing and I'll revisit it that I don't know what else to say. I'm surprised that he thinks it's unreasonable. And you know, it's okay.
You're entitled to your opinion. It's all right. I don't expect everybody to agree with me. That's not going to happen. Good luck. We'll see you back here. Thank you very much. And you have to go over to Wood Haven and get printed and photographed. People against labidity read Dean Labidity Jr.
25 W82910.
>> Have you had a chance to review? He pled by the way to this uh under height at a window peeping.
>> That's correct.
>> And uh he was to go to a NA twice a week. Have you seen that for him?
>> 10 uh 10 visits.
>> He's been doing that. Okay, good.
>> Uh should I submit this to your clerk for copying?
>> No, that's all right. I I trust you. I just He's going to need to keep that.
Okay.
>> He's been doing really well on that.
Good.
>> Very seriously. Uh whenever you're ready, I can address the PSI.
>> Yeah. Have you had a chance to review the report?
>> We did. We looked over this morning. I I went over to my client. The only uh the only real issue is that we had I seems to me like outpatient counseling is a bit extreme. If he's testing twice a week, he's been clean. He's been following the court's uh recommendation and order. As far as AA goes, uh maybe if if the court was inclined to to to entertain that particular um that particular element uh that if it was if he tested positive maybe that it could trigger out >> because he's he expressed to me this morning. I mean, I think they're I think they're as strong as, you know, he he had THC in his system. He acknowledged he he was using marijuana and he had 10 beers and now he's going in the backyard of somebody's house and window peeping. I mean, I I don't think it's that extreme, but I get it. Go ahead. I'm sorry. I mean, interrupt.
>> No, no. And I think that that's a very valid point and I think that that's something that he expressed to me this morning was that, you know, I think he's relieved that this ended where it did, you know, and it didn't have result extreme.
Uh, you know, I mean, people get shot for stuff like that. And that was something that he expressed to me was that, you know, in the grand scheme of things, the severity of it was probably as minimal as it could be.
Uh but judge yes I would just I would say that you know given the fact that you you know going to two AA sessions per week and has you know weekly or bi-weekly testing whatever the court would order on that if he did test positive and he's quit smoking marijuana for the most part I think uh if he tested positive for alcohol or drugs any illegal drugs at any point in time then at that point in time that trigger an outpatient program.
>> Okay.
>> Glut heard.
>> Yes, >> I got it.
>> Anything else? Either one of you.
>> Do you have anything?
>> I just want to say it was a dumb mistake and I'm glad I turned off all the way a lot worse.
>> And you went over and got fingerprinted, right?
>> Yeah, I did. Uh think right after the last boarding.
>> All right. I'm going to take this under the training act as agreed upon. That's what you guys agreed upon. I'll do that. 15 months probation. You cannot leave the state without the consent of the court. You cannot violate any law or ordinance. You change your address rush. Place your employer home telephone number. You must notify probation. You have to report as directed. No alcohol, no marijuana, no illegal controlled substances. You're not to purchase possessor consume any one of those.
Praum poppy seeds and CBD oils are prohibited. Consuming food or other items containing those substances will be deemed a violation. You're submitted to chemical testing PBTs bi-weekly for 4 months. If you're clean, I'll then make it. I'm going to order 4 days jail and we'll let you serve those as follows. 3 days on the court work program. There's a $35 a day charge for that for a total of 105 and one day or eight hours of community service which you have to complete in this case by March the 20. Um I am going to order that you continue attending a a NA twice a week in person until you're in outpatient treatment and order outpatient treatment as well. We to attend that and complete that. So do you understand the sentence so far?
>> Yes. Fines are 100. Costs are 275.
Victim's right fee, $50 justice assessment, foreign border, screening fee 6485.
If you violate, your probation could be revoked. You could be incarcerated for 90 days. You have 21 days to appeal and 14 days to apply for a court of appointed var.
You understand that? All right. That's what I'm going to do. The judge addressed the defendant, stating that he was either heavily intoxicated or intentionally peeping into someone's window or possibly both. The case was taken under a specific statute, and the judge explained that he would accept the defendant's guilty plea and order a pre-sentence investigation report. The judge also informed the defendant of the possible penalties, including up to 90 days in jail and fines up to $500, and confirmed that he understood his rights and was pleading voluntarily. The defendant admitted to looking into a window at around 4:30 in the morning at a residence in Wood Haven, although he initially thought it was his own former home where he had lived with his father.
He also admitted to consuming a significant amount of alcohol that day, which raised concerns about his level of intoxication and memory. The judge questioned the credibility of his explanation, noting that he had not lived there for about 2 years and suggesting that his actions indicated a serious alcohol-related issue. As a result, the court imposed strict bond conditions, including a $1,000 personal bond, no contact with the victims, no return to the property, abstinence from alcohol and drugs, and mandatory attendance at Alcoholics Anonymous meetings twice a week. The defendant was also required to undergo screening, fingerprinting, and a pre-sentence investigation before final sentencing.
The judge emphasized that the screening would help determine the extent of any substance abuse problem while maintaining an open mind until the final report was reviewed. The case was adjourned for sentencing at a later
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