Can being obese keep you out of prison?

Kathy S.
on 11/16/17 9:10 am - InTheBurbs, XX
RNY on 08/29/04 with

We here in our community fight very hard for respect and recognition of our battle and pain we go through as obese people in the world. When I read something like this I want to say, REALLY?

Fat lives matter, is the argument one lawyer is making to keep his 273-pound client out of prison.

HW:330 - GW:150 - MW:118-125

RW:190 - CW:130

VSGAnn2014
on 11/16/17 9:27 am
VSG on 08/14/14

LOL! Talk about clickbait!

That's some creative rationalization by a member of the best rationalizers of all ... lawyers. ;)

ANN 5'5", AGE 74, HW 235.6 (BMI 39.2), SW 216, GW 150, CW 132, BMI 22

POUNDS LOST: Pre-op -20, M1 -10, M2 -11, M3 -10, M4 -10, M5 -7, M6 -5, M7 -6, M8 -4, M9 -4,
NEXT 10 MOS. -12, TOTAL -100 LBS.

Kathy S.
on 11/16/17 10:01 am - InTheBurbs, XX
RNY on 08/29/04 with

If you don't want to click to the article here it is....

OCTOBER 22, 2017 03:34 PM

UPDATED OCTOBER 22, 2017 03:36 PM

After a federal court case that moved ponderously under the weight of evidence, with a hefty 36-page ruling calling the U.S. tax code a "bloated and opaque monstrosity," Tampa resident Stephen Donaldson Sr. was convicted of getting financially fat off the government.

Last week, Donaldson's attorney argued he was too physically fat for six years in prison.

Curtis Fallgatter, a member of the Florida Bar since 1976, filed a court document objecting to the six-year, four-month sentence Donaldson received for conspiracy to defraud the government and tax fraud.

The grounds? Donaldson's physical state: five-foot-nine, 273 pounds, 72 years old. The lawyer attached a chart from the Social Security Administration showing the life expectancy for a man of average health is another 13.9 years.

"Mr. Donaldson is not a senior citizen falling within the normal demographics for his age group," Fallgatter wrote. "As an obese male, his life expectancy can expect to be substantially reduced. Even if he were perfectly healthy and not obese, his life expectancy is only 13.9 years. Thus, the 76-month sentence received by Mr. Donaldson represents almost half of his entire life expectancy (46%), such that, with the current sentence, Mr. Donaldson will spend half of his remaining life under this prison sentence (in addition to spending the last 10 years under the stressful scrutiny of the government). Moreover, if Mr. Donaldson only lives 75% of the average life expectancy (that is, 10.4 years), his 76 month sentence will translate into 61% of his remaining life under this prison sentence."

U.S. District Court Judge Stephen D. Merryday rejected the motion on Friday.

Donaldson and Duane Crithfield ran a scam in which they sold "Business Protection Plan" insurance against unlikely events as a legal tax shelter. But when they refunded most of the premium and the customers deducted the full premium as a business expense, that turned it into tax fraud. Merryday's decision used an overabundance of words to poke at the corpulent tax code.

"Consistent with the considered judgment of their advisers, these taxpayers purchased at a steep cost a set of fantastical and superfluous "insurance" policies and in return re-captured control of cash equal to about 85% of the premium paid for each policy," Merryday wrote. "In other words, the taxpayers accepted the notion that they could reduce the effective, maximum, marginal-income tax rate from about 40% to about 15% by signing a few papers and moving money from here to there, from there to who knows where, and then back again.

"That these mostly honest, educated, and experienced taxpayers and their savvy advisers believed in, and committed money to, this criminal scam presents an irrefutable and deafening reminder of the extent of the public's cynicism toward the federal income tax code -- a bloated and opaque monstrosity."

HW:330 - GW:150 - MW:118-125

RW:190 - CW:130

hollykim
on 11/16/17 10:16 am - Nashville, TN
Revision on 03/18/15
On November 16, 2017 at 5:10 PM Pacific Time, Kathy S. wrote:

We here in our community fight very hard for respect and recognition of our battle and pain we go through as obese people in the world. When I read something like this I want to say, REALLY?

Fat lives matter, is the argument one lawyer is making to keep his 273-pound client out of prison.

I don't think anything but death could keep him out of prision.

 


          

 

(deactivated member)
on 11/16/17 6:01 pm
VSG on 10/11/16

The man needs to do time, whether or not he is fat. Being fat did not prevent him from being a criminal. It should not prevent him from suffering the consequences.

Kathy S.
on 11/17/17 8:40 am - InTheBurbs, XX
RNY on 08/29/04 with

Besides, it may be a great way to lose weight. I heard the food stinks and they have the workout equipment? You never know

HW:330 - GW:150 - MW:118-125

RW:190 - CW:130

Lishamc1
on 11/18/17 10:22 am

I am a nurse in a jail and have dealt with larger people. The food is not great and mainly consist of carbs, but most people do lose weight in jail (due to portion control) nice try though....

Highest weight: 265, surgery weight: 245, surgery date: 9/11/17 RNY m1: - 26 m2: - 14 m3: -15 m4: -10 m5: -8 m6: - 4 m7: -6.5 m8: - 1.5 m9: -3 m10: - 0 m11: - 2 m12: -0

Kathy S.
on 11/20/17 10:03 am - InTheBurbs, XX
RNY on 08/29/04 with

And you and I know while he is very overweight there are a lot of much larger people in prison. I agree nice try

HW:330 - GW:150 - MW:118-125

RW:190 - CW:130

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