Burress begins prison sentence

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NEW YORK -- One-time Super Bowl hero Plaxico Burress was sentenced to two years in prison Tuesday for violating New York's stringent gun laws and was immediately taken into custody following his hearing.
Burress was expected to serve 20 months of the sentence, which he agreed to last month when he pleaded guilty to a lesser firearms charge, followed by two years of probation. The charges stemmed from an incident late last fall, when Burress accidentally shot himself in the thigh at a Manhattan nightclub.
The case went to a grand jury after months of negotiations between prosecutors and Burress' defense attorney broke down, apparently because Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau insisted that the former New York Giants wide receiver serve at least two years in prison for violating the city's strict gun laws.
On July 29, Burress took the rare and risky step of testifying before the grand jury, hoping to convince the panel that the gun was not used in the commission of a crime and that he was the lone victim. But days later, Burress was indicted on two counts of criminal possession of a weapon and one count of reckless endangerment. He faced a minimum sentence of 3½ years if convicted at trial.
On Aug. 20, the day he was to be arraigned, Burress agreed to a plea deal and pleaded guilty to attempted weapons possession in the second degree.
Hours after Burress' court appearance, the NFL announced that commissioner Roger Goodell had suspended the receiver and said Burress is ineligible to sign with any team until he completes his prison term. After that, Burress may sign with an NFL team without further review.

Burress and former teammate Antonio Pierce were at the Latin Quarter nightclub in Manhattan in late November 2008 when a gun tucked into Burress' waistband slipped down his leg and fired, shooting him in the right thigh.
The bullet narrowly missed a nightclub security guard who was standing inches away, prosecutors said. It lodged in the floor and was recovered by a bartender.
The gun was not licensed in New York or in New Jersey, where Burress lived. His license to carry a concealed weapon in the state of Florida had expired in May 2008.
Prosecutors said Pierce drove Burress to a hospital, then took the gun to his own home in New Jersey. It was later delivered to Burress' home. Pierce, who also testified before the grand jury, was not charged.
 

powdered milkman
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i traded randy moss for him in fantasy on the off chance he escapes
 

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him testifying before the grand jury was the dumbest thing he could've done..

pierce prob was like good luck on your own brotha
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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They have some strict gun laws in NYC...kinda feel sorry for the guy
 

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Whole situation is a joke. Gun laws are fine, but he had the gun registered before, it was just expired. And he gets 2 years in jail.

We have enough people in jails, lets save jails for people that are actually a threat to society.
 

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Read up on handgun laws in NY krk..
I thought Chicago (cook county) was bad
 

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Gun laws vary greatly from state to state. I know at one time and it still may be true - possess a gun without a license in Mass. and you automatically got a year.

The difference between the Vick case and the Burress case is that Vick basically got somewhere in the area of what he deserved for his dog fighting activity while Plaxico was just dumb enough to shoot himself by accident and now has to serve 20 months on top of that humilation.

The entire Burress fiasco blows the mind, to go from arguably a top five in the game wideout to a convict overnight without actually attempting to commit a crime (not even drunk driving) is hard to understand. In Vick's case he was involved in a criminal enterprise, a disgusting one IMO but he was committing a real crime. Plaxico let his gun permit expire and was klutz enough to shoot himself by accident.

In today's market a player with Plaxico's talent and just the discipline it takes to play the game and stay out of trouble with the law is worth tens of millions of dollars over a career.

Plus his laywer should be forced to do time for letting him testify against himself in front of a could give a shit less Grand Jury. Small wonder there are roughly two and half million people behind bars in the US today.

wil.

NOTE:

The United States has the highest documented incarceration rate, and total documented prison population in the world. As of year-end 2007, a record 7.2 million people were behind bars, on probation or on parole. Of the total, 2.3 million were incarcerated. More than 1 in 100 American adults were incarcerated at the start of 2008. The People's Republic of China ranks second with 1.5 million, while having four times the population, thus having only about 18% of the US incarceration rate.

Source Wikipedia.com


wil.
 

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Whole situation is a joke. Gun laws are fine, but he had the gun registered before, it was just expired. And he gets 2 years in jail.

I may be wrong about this... but I don't think the gun was ever registered in the state of NY. So, even the gun had been reg istered in Florida, that wouldn't have cut any ice in NY.


We have enough people in jails, lets save jails for people that are actually a threat to society.
Any time a loaded gun goes off in a crowded place, it's a threat to society.

Doc
 

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Just read a bit more about this today, and wanted to reiterate some stuff I said before... There are essentially two reasons to put people in prison: as a deterrent or to protect society. In this case, I highly doubt those who carry around concealed handguns (or other unregistered weapons) are going to think about changing their lifestyles. At the same time, even if you believe Burress was a danger to society while carrying, I can't imagine he would ever do it again. So if it's not a deterrent, and not protecting anyone - why are we doing this?

The answer in this case was so simple: 2 years of house arrest and 40hrs/week of community service for those two years. He would be living on his own dime (not the taxpayer's) and perhaps, he could actually do something positive in those two years and be the deterrent that his prison sentence fails at.
 

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