
Originally Posted by
PamNY
Um, did you actually read the news coverage?
That's the whole point of restitution -- it's an attempt to make up for some of what the victim lost, and it is part of sentencing in the criminal justice system. The prosecutor claims that keeping the guy's earning ability (and the possibility of a civil suit) played a role in his decision because there will be "significant" restitution. That could be nonsense, or it could be true.
He says the plea bargain is actually "more punitive" than what the victim wants (conditional felony). I haven't found anywhere the complete details of the plea bargain -- the two misdemeanor counts could mean two years in jail, but will they?
I thought it would be interesting to consider -- and I still think that, but obviously not here.
I thought I read in one article (I've looked at so many now that I've lost track) that if there had been a felony charge, there would have still been misdemeanor counts that would have "stuck" on the permanent criminal record. But maybe I'm mis-remembering. 
A financial planner with a Mercedes probably has a ton of other assets. If you take away his ability to work in his profession (which is debatable, I also read that the DA himself said he wasn't 100% sure the felony would cause the guy to lose his job) so that he'd have to drain those assets, would that be even greater punishment? Again, we don't know any of the real terms of any potential deals, so who knows.
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