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Party night tip: Be sentencing safe when you surf and post

Facebook_pic This new CBS/AP story, headlined “Drinking, Driving And Facebook Don’t Mix: Web Networking Photos Come Back To Bite Defendants,” provides another twist on our modern brave new world of sentencing technologies.  Here are snippets from a story that provides a pre-party-night cautionary tale:

Two weeks after Joshua Lipton was charged in a drunken driving crash that seriously injured a woman, the 20-year-old college junior attended a Halloween party dressed as a prisoner.  Pictures from the party showed him in a black-and-white striped shirt and an orange jumpsuit labeled “Jail Bird.” In the age of the Internet, it might not be hard to guess what happened to those pictures: Someone posted them on the social networking site Facebook.

And that offered remarkable evidence for Jay Sullivan, the prosecutor handling Lipton’s drunken-driving case.  Sullivan used the pictures to paint Lipton as an unrepentant partier who lived it up while his victim recovered in the hospital. A judge agreed, calling the pictures depraved when sentencing Lipton to two years in prison….

Online hangouts like Facebook and MySpace have offered crime-solving help to detectives and become a resource for employers vetting job applicants.  Now the sites are proving fruitful for prosecutors, who have used damaging Internet photos of defendants to cast doubt on their character during sentencing hearings and argue for harsher punishment….

Prosecutors do not appear to be scouring networking sites while preparing for every sentencing, even though telling photos of criminal defendants are sometimes available in plain sight and accessible under a person’s real name.  But in cases where they’ve had reason to suspect incriminating pictures online, or have been tipped off to a particular person’s MySpace or Facebook page, the sites have yielded critical character evidence.