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Posted January 6, 2009
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Macomb, Michigan
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Doug Guthrie / The Detroit News
DETROIT -- Christine Beatty "misused" her many talents when she participated in a text-message cover-up with former Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick that hid the details of their affair and ultimately cost the city millions of dollars, Wayne County Circuit Judge Timothy Kenny said this morning as he sent Beatty to jail for four months. Kenny, on the bench in Beatty's sentencing, honored a plea-bargain agreement calling for 120 days in jail, five years probation and payment of $100,000 restitution to the city. She also cannot attend or get credit for law school classes during that time. "I do think this case does represent the triumph of truth over political power and might," Kenny said. It also proved that "lying in court has a price tag, even for those who are the politically elite within the community." When the public trust has been abused, there needs to be punishment," Kenny said. Beatty, 38, declined an opportunity to address the court. She is to be taken directly from the sentencing in a sixth-floor courtroom at Frank Murphy Hall of Justice to the neighboring Wayne County Jail. Beatty resigned as Kilpatrick's chief of staff last January when copies of messages from city-owned text pagers revealed she and Kilpatrick lied to cover-up their 2003 extramarital affair. The cover-up started after officers within the Detroit Police Department began investigating allegations of impropriety among Kilpatrick's bodyguards and inner circle. An $8.4 million settlement of the lawsuits included a secret side deal to hush the existence of the more than 10,000 text messages. The messages eventually were disclosed in the media. Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy followed with an investigation of her own that obtained copies of more than 600,000 texts. Kenny said the case wasn't like the Monica Lewinsky scandal that dogged former President Clinton. Instead, he said, "this case is about ... where two honorable police officers had their lives tuned inside out to cover up an affair." "In the end, the taxpayers of Detroit were handed a bill for $8.4 million by Mr. Kilpatrick," Kenny said. Beatty was charged in March with perjury, conspiracy, obstruction of justice and misconduct in office. She struck the plea deal with prosecutors on Dec. 1 to avoid going to trial after contesting the charges with legal arguments over the admissibility the text messages. Kenny had indicated he was going to allow most of the messages at a trial that was set to start Monday. Kilpatrick, 38, made a similar plea deal in September. He was sentenced on Oct. 28 to 120 days in jail, five years probation and $1 million in restitution. He also turned in his law license and is prohibited from holding elected office while on probation. Kilpatrick is due to be released from jail early next month. Beatty is likely to be released in mid-April. In remarks before Kenny handed down the statement, assistant prosecutor Robert Spada questioned whether Beatty will have the ability to pay off her restitution because of her lack of income and huge bills. She owes $1,200 a month for an SUV, $2,400 for her mortgage, $1,000 a month to retire old debts, $617 a month in student loans and more than $200 a month for a $4,381 rug she bought in December 2007. She also owes her attorneys nearly $750,000. She has $6 in her checking account, Spada said. "There is no argument that she doesn't have anything," conceded her attorney, Mayer "Mike" Morganroth. Worthy has said she continues to investigate possible wrongdoing by others revealed in the text messages, but Beatty's sentencing ends any new text message related prosecution of her and Kilpatrick. Worthy has said she planned to reveal more details about her investigation after today's sentencing. Federal authorities also have an ongoing investigation of city contracting during the Kilpatrick administration. +You can reach Doug Guthrie at (313) 222-2548 or http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-175860/#.+ Link:http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090106/METRO/901060401 Photo with posting from Detroit News (Brandy Baker) -From Wikipedia: Christine Rowland Beatty was (born May 1970) and served as the Chief of Staff from 2002 to 2008 to Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick. In January 2008, Beatty resigned amid an emerging political-sex scandal and criminal charges of perjury related to a whistleblower trial for lying under oath about their extramarital affair and that they sought to mislead jurors when they testified that they did not fire Deputy Police Chief Gary Brown. Kilpatrick has already pleaded guilty September 4, 2008 to two felony obstruction of justice charges, and was sentenced to four months in prison on October 28, 2008. She was offered several plea bargains from Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy
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