Stofsk wrote:Vympel wrote:Another thing - the whole "judge was going to reject the a plea bargain" bullshit. Judge's aren't bound to honor a plea bargain. They can - and do - reject them.
What was Polanski expecting to get from his plea deal, and why did the judge in his case give signs he wasn't going to honour it?
In exchange for pleading guilty to unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor (basically, statutory rape which at the time was considered less serious than coercive rape as the latter implied assault and the former did not include issues of consent or force) and sparing the state the time and cost of a full trial the state of California would drop charges of drugged rape, perversion, sodomy, sexual act on a child under 14, and furnishing a controlled substance to a minor (quaaludes - they never brought up giving alcohol to a minor, it just wasn't seen as seriously back then as it is now).
Polanski did report to prison in California for psychiatric evaluation and was released after a couple months. After that, Polanski and legal team apparently expected him to get probation, and some credit for time already served. Supposedly, the judge said something to Polanski's attorneys that suggested he'd throw out the plea agreement, basically throw the book at Polanski, and afterward have him deported from the US.
The US did request extradition from France, which refused, which is entirely permissible under the extradition treaty between those two countries (the key thing here being Polanski's French citizenship).
There is no statute of limitations in California for sex crimes or for failing to appear at one's sentencing hearing. Hence, 30+ years later Polanski is arrested on the old warrant.