Wesley Snipes fought the law. Unfortunately for him, the law won.
Senior U.S. District Judge William Terrell Hodges has sentenced the tax-averse Blade star to three years in prison, resulting from his conviction on three misdemeanor counts of willful failure to file a tax return earlier this year.
The punishment is the maximum sentence Snipes could face after a federal jury found him guilty on Feb. 1.
The harsh sentence came down after a daylong hearing in Ocala, Fla., in which both sides repeated their arguments as to whether or not the 45-year-old action star should face prison time for his IRS-dodging ways.
Snipes donned a black suit and tie for his day in court, arriving at the courthouse with an entourage of roughly a dozen briefcase-toting hangers-on.
TV gavel-wielder Judge Greg Mathis was among those present in the courtroom for the sentencing. Mathis, along with Woody Harrelson, Denzel Washington and another small-screen jurist, Judge Joe Brown, wrote letters in defense of Snipes, which were made public yesterday and read in court today prior to the actor's sentencing.
The prosecution had long made clear they were gunning for the maximum sentence for the star.
While jurors cleared Snipes of two felony charges and three additional misdemeanors back in February, he was found guilty of willful failure to file his returns between 1999-2001, neglecting to report millions of dollars of income to the IRS. The exact figure ended up being contested, with Snipes' attorneys claiming the star was liable for only $228,000, while the feds claimed the figure was considerably higher$2.7 million, to be exact.
When Carmen Hernandez, one of Snipes' attorneys, argued regardless that this morning that Snipes' crimes weren't serious enough to warrant the maximum sentence, Hodges quickly set her straight.
"Any offense that places my liberty at risk is a serious one," the judge replied.
In a 37-page memo to the court filed earlier this month, U.S. Attorney Robert E. O'Neill called Snipes a "notorious" and repeat offender who should be made an example, not only because of the amount of money involved, but because of the high-profileand, O'Neill said, misleadingnature of the case.
In his petition, he said the star's team has spun the jury's convictions "in the mainstream media as a 'victory' for Snipes" and urged the judge to send the message that Snipes did not in fact "beat the rap."
Job done.
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I thought Snipes comments were really what got him in trouble. somethin like "I'm just an actor your honor, not schooled in economics and taxes, and fell victim to those who said they knew & had my best interest in mind."
ok, you are a multi-millionaire & decided not to even file a tax return. if he was smart he probably wouldn't have had to pay anything legally.
he's going to prison for being arrogant & stupid.
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"And like Web, I enjoy throwing JR under the bus. Problem is, it's usually under the special bus that I ride every day". Ghostdancer 12-18-09