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Paris Hilton pleads guilty, sentenced to year of probation

  • GARY THOMPSON/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

    Paris Hilton appears Monday in Las Vegas Justice Court to plead guilty to two misdemeanor charges. Justice of the Peace Joe Bonaventure suspended her sentence but warned she would serve a year in the Clark County jail if she got in trouble again. » Buy this photo

  • Paris Hilton arrives Monday morning at the Clark County Regional Justice Center accompanied by her attorney David Chesnoff. The celebrity socialite was sentenced to a year of probation after she pleaded guilty to two misdemeanors. JESSICA EBELHAR/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL » Buy this photo

By FRANCIS MCCABE
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Sep. 20, 2010 | 7:40 a.m.
Updated: Sep. 21, 2010 | 7:35 a.m.

After warning Paris Hilton that the Clark County Detention Center isn't "the Waldorf-Astoria," a Las Vegas justice of the peace sentenced the celebrity socialite Monday to a year of probation after she pleaded guilty to two misdemeanors.

Standing before Justice of the Peace Joe Bonaventure, Hilton admitted that both the 0.8 gram of cocaine and the Chanel handbag where it was found were hers and said she was guilty of misdemeanor drug possession and misdemeanor obstructing an officer.

"I was in possession," Hilton said meekly. She then told Bonaventure that she had lied to a Las Vegas police lieutenant when she told him the handbag containing the cocaine wasn't hers.

The hotel heiress -- who lived at the Waldorf-Astoria, which is part of the Hilton chain, when she was growing up -- was arrested Aug. 27 on one felony count of cocaine possession after she opened the Chanel flap bag to get some lip balm and a small plastic bag of cocaine fell out, landing in the palm of the lieutenant. She accepted a deal from Clark County prosecutors that reduced the felony to two misdemeanors.

Bonaventure sentenced Hilton to two consecutive six-month sentences in the county jail, which were suspended. Hilton was placed on a year of informal probation, meaning she will not have to report to a probation officer. According to the sentence, if Hilton is arrested during her probation, she will have to serve a full year in jail.

"The purpose of this, at this point, is that you change your conduct. If you're not changing your conduct, the purpose then shifts simply to punishment," Bonaventure told Hilton in front of a packed courtroom at the Clark County Regional Justice Center. "When you break the law here (in Clark County), there are consequences.

"I'm going to warn you, Miss Hilton, you've now been sentenced to one year in the Clark County Detention Center. The Clark County Detention Center is not the Waldorf-Astoria. But I assure you that if you violate the terms of your probation, you will serve one year in the Clark County Detention Center," Bonaventure said.

The justice of the peace asked if Hilton understood. She said, "Yes, your Honor."

The courtroom was packed with media and folks who just happened to be on Bonaventure's Monday morning calendar with their own cases.

The only attempted contact with Hilton by a member of the public was made by a skinny, white-bearded man who tried to hand her attorney an opened bag of pretzels. He was quickly escorted from the courtroom by marshals.

After leaving the courtroom, Hilton took out a mirrored blush compact and checked her makeup as she walked toward the elevators.

The 29-year-old walked out the front door of the Clark County district courthouse accompanied by her attorney David Chesnoff, a throng of court marshals and a mob of photographers, TV news crews and reporters.

She was then whisked away in a black Cadillac Escalade about 8 a.m.

According to the plea agreement, Hilton must stay out of trouble. "Defendant agrees that an arrest for any charge, excluding minor traffic violations for which a citation is issued, shall result in the immediate termination of her probation and the execution of the suspended sentences." A minor traffic violation is anything other than a reckless driving or driving under the influence charge.

Hilton must also successfully complete a substance abuse program, pay a $2,000 fine and perform 200 hours of community service, according to the plea deal. The nature and location of the community service will be determined later.

Chesnoff, who has represented numerous celebrity clients in Las Vegas, said Hilton "accepted responsibility" and has been "polite and contrite through the whole procedure. I think she's on the road to success here."

He said she will likely continue her charitable activities with animal rights groups and children's hospitals to fulfill her 200 hours of community service. He would not comment on which substance abuse program she would attend, but told Bonaventure it would be an outpatient program.

Chesnoff said Hilton's family has strong ties to Las Vegas, and she will likely return.

"She loves Las Vegas. She loves the people of Las Vegas. I'm sure she will return," he said.

If Hilton satisfies all the requirements of her probation, she will not have to attend her next scheduled court appearance, set for Sept. 20, 2011.

According to an amended criminal complaint, the obstructing charge was added because Hilton lied to police when she said the Chanel bag wasn't hers.

Hilton told police the purse and the cocaine belonged to someone else, though other things in it -- $1,300 cash, credit cards, cigarette rolling papers and a prescription pill to treat asthma -- belonged to her. Hilton said she thought the cocaine was gum, according to her arrest report.

"In truth, the Defendant purchased the Chanel handbag months earlier," the complaint states.

The Chanel handbag was featured in numerous tabloid photos the night of the arrest, and it was soon discovered that Hilton had on July 15 posted a photo of the bag on her Twitter account, saying, "Love my new Chanel purse I got today :)."

Hilton originally was charged with felony cocaine possession. That charge would not have resulted in any jail time. Statute requires mandatory probation for a first-time drug possession conviction, though a judge could assign jail time as part of the probation requirement.

Hilton, dressed in a black-and-cream wrap dress and carrying a black purse, arrived at the courthouse about 7:15 a.m. and was led through a metal barrier and up the steps by several court marshals without answering questions.

The courthouse steps were packed with local and national media as early as 5:30 a.m., but the mood was relatively calm in the hours before Hilton's appearance.

Those waiting to enter the courthouse for their own early morning hearings seemed mildly interested in the buzz as Hilton arrived but not overwhelmed.

"I guess we're not as important as Paris Hilton," mused one woman as the socialite was escorted to the front of the line.

Comedian Anthony Barbieri, a prankster best known for his celebrity-obsessed character "Jake Byrd," chased Hilton into the courthouse with a sign that read "She's Not Scarface" on one side and "Justis 4 Paris" on the other.

"You can't tame that white tiger," he shouted at Hilton as she marched into the court. "She's back, folks, Paris is back!"

In an interview with reporters in his Byrd character after Hilton was out of sight, Barbieri claimed he took a bus from Chino, Calif., to witness Hilton's court appearance.

Wearing a "Stop the Parisecution" T-shirt and a "#1 Fan" ball cap, Barbieri said he couldn't believe cocaine was illegal in Las Vegas.

"Don't you think Las Vegas owes her an apology?" he asked.

"This is a woman with countless Chihuahuas to take care of, her own perfume line," he said. "And they're sticking her in there like a common thug."

One woman waiting to accompany her daughter into the courthouse said she was glad Hilton had to enter the same way everybody else does.

Hilton's latest arrest came when her boyfriend, nightclub mogul Cy Waits, was stopped by a motorcycle officer who said he smelled marijuana coming from Waits' 2009 Cadillac Escalade on the Strip near Wynn Las Vegas. Hilton was a passenger in the vehicle.

Waits, 34, was arrested on a misdemeanor charge of driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs.

He spent the night in jail before he was released on $2,000 bail with a Nov. 29 court date.

After the incident, casino mogul Steve Wynn cut ties with Waits and banned Hilton from his properties.

Hilton has one previous conviction. She pleaded no contest in 2007 to alcohol-related reckless driving. She was sentenced to 45 days in jail but was released after 23 days.

Hilton was arrested this summer after the Brazil-Netherlands World Cup match in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, on suspicion of possession of marijuana. The case was dropped at a midnight court hearing.

Las Vegas Review-Journal writer Mike Blasky contributed to this report. Contact reporter Francis McCabe at fmccabe@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-1039.

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  1. david.vonalst Oct. 16, 2011 | 6:33 a.m. Report Abuse

    big deal she as any adult and i express adult should do as she pleases it amazes me the 2 worst drugs tobacco and alcohol are the ones legal still havent learned about prohibition isnt it time to take this out of murderous cartels and legalize drugs people forget when you could order heroin from sears and robuck quit building jails and build rehabs ive been to prison for pot i figured 80% were there one way or another for alcohol or meth they are not getting help

  2. No More Pizza Sep. 27, 2010 | 4:23 a.m. Report Abuse

    Paris, let's go get a slice of pizza! I LOVE YOU! I can never get enough pizza... but I shouldn't.

  3. SO? Sep. 22, 2010 | 10:24 a.m. Report Abuse

    @JohnRomaj- precisely. If the "law" cracked down on casino hosts and their supply lines, the high roller tables would be empty. The casino owners make every effort to make sure their hosts aren't supplying high rollers with blow...and Steve Wynn has a very strict "no drugs" policy at his nightclubs.. (wink wink). yeah right. Except for the R-Tards on here posting about half an eight-ball being enough to get you high for weeks on end,..we all know what's really going on down on the strip. The skids get greased by whatever means necessary.

  4. vegaslee Sep. 21, 2010 | 8:57 p.m. Report Abuse

    RebelFan19, another misstatement of facts. First time possession like she was here gets you no more then one year of probation. NO JAIL TIME at all.

  5. SteveF8 Sep. 21, 2010 | 7:16 p.m. Report Abuse

    Anyone who thinks this judge or any other judge will lock her disgustingly bony butt up for violating her probation is a compete fool!

  6. Oscar.Jones Sep. 21, 2010 | 6:35 p.m. Report Abuse

    Paris....please OD on your Drugs. The Cops have better things to do, than to keep arresting you for the same thing. You may be rich, and can buy Local Judges over and over.....but you are a worthless, uninteresting globetrotting Tramp. After America saw your Pantyless photos, you and Brittney did more to BOOST the sale of Pantys, than anyone else.

  7. TY Sep. 21, 2010 | 5:06 p.m. Report Abuse

    I guess when u have money you can get away with anything. Any other person who would have been cought with cocaine on THE STRIP would still be in jail she gets away with everthing. A year probation without reporting to an probation officer are u serious Joe Bonaventure the usless judge. Is it because she's white!!!!! First she cries her way out of jail in Cali after 2 Dui and a suspended license now this will she every go to jail.

  8. John.Romaj Sep. 21, 2010 | 4:25 p.m. Report Abuse

    Curious why the DA's office has never arrested one of the many casino hosts and nightclub promoters/hosts who traffic cocaine and other controlled substances to high rollers every night of the week at the biggest strip resorts?....Oh right, that would interfere with the flow of money from the rich suckers to the people who own all the DA and all the judges....the casino owners..

  9. John.Romaj Sep. 21, 2010 | 4:10 p.m. Report Abuse

    Somebody needs to brush up on their metric system....someone getting "high" for a "few weeks" from eight tenths of a gram of blow?.....I spit out my coffee on my screen laughing when I read that one.....A seasoned coke head like Paris would knock that bag off in one night.....

  10. SO? Sep. 21, 2010 | 3:59 p.m. Report Abuse

    @RebelFan19- sir, please go have a glass of milk and step away from the podium. You clearly don't know what you're talking about. The amount of blow that Paris had was enough for someone to get high for about 3 hours.. no more, no less. It would take 100 times what she had to be "high" for weeks on end. Why do you care anyway? You obviously think Paris or anyone else caught with blow should be in jail? What purpose does THAT serve, other than a cost to the taxpayers. I for one could care less if Paris wants to put a gallon of coke up her nose.. after all, it's her nose. Why are you so interested in what other people do anyways??? We are getting screwed because Paris isn't in jail for a year? How's that...???? I for one don't want to pay her jail bill... I suppose you can if you want and it makes you feel good as a taxpayer to be supporting Paris for a year..we can just have the bill sent diretly to your home ok? I believe it's around $30grand a year to have someone incarcerated for that period.

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