Special Favor Request Time - Protect Christopher Wheeler - Why Not Protect his Own Daughter.
Watch This Close - See if the Florida Attorney Fraternity - Protects the daughter of a Florida Supreme Court Judge as a Jorge Larbara protected Proskauer Rose, Christopher Wheeler and Did not allow Iviewit Evidence in a Trillion Dollar Stolen Patent, or really seem to care about one of the biggest car bombs ever to happen in Florida - put in the Inventors car in an attempt to Murder Him and his Family, WATCH ever Detail of This Folks as it Plays Out...
"" WEST PALM BEACH — The daughter of Florida Supreme Court Justice, and former Palm Beach County Circuit Judge, Jorge Labarga, was arrested on a drunk driving charge this morning, records show.
Stephanie Labarga, 23, of Wellington, was booked at 4 a.m. today into the Palm Beach County Jail.
She was released at 10 a.m. on her own recognizance.
Records show her blood alcohol content was 0.173 and 0.177, more than double the 0.08 minimum for DUI.
According to a Palm Beach County Sheriff's report, around 1:40 a.m. today, a deputy spotted Labarga racing west on Okeechobee Boulevard near Folsom Road.
The car was going 53 mph in a 35 mph zone and had its blinker on, the deputy reported.
The deputy stopped Labarga, who the deputy said had bloodshot and glassy eyes and emitted a strong odor of alcohol, according to the report.
Labarga said she was on her way home from downtown West Palm Beach and admitted she'd been drinking.
As the deputy drove her off, she begged him to let her go if she got a ride, the report said.
Requests for comment made to Justice Labarga's office were referred to Florida Supreme Court spokesman Craig Waters.
Waters said he had talked to Labarga's staff this morning but that ethics rules forbid justices or the court itself from commenting on pending cases of any kind.
Labarga was named to the high court in January 2009.
According to Florida Statues, a person charged with DUI — even the first time — faces a gauntlet of mandatory penalties and thousands of dollars in fees, fines and costs. They also face two possible license suspensions: one from the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles as well as a separate one from the court.
The penalties include:
mandatory adjudication of guilt, meaning the DUI conviction is stamped on a person's record.
between $500 and $1,000 in fines, and court costs beginning at $406.
up to six months jail, but not typically for first-time offenders.
mandatory probation from six months to a year.
mandatory DUI school and any required treatment or counseling
50 hours community service
10-day immobilization of vehicle
attendance at one victim-impact panel
if a driver's 's breath test registers .15 or above, a mandatory device placed on the driver's vehicle for six months with a built-in breathalyzer.""
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime/stephanie-labarga-daughter-of-state-supreme-court-judge-266386.html?cxntcid=breaking_news
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