Lindsay Lohan is expected to be released from a Lynwood jail on Aug. 2, serving only 14 days of her 90-day sentence, according to a Sheriff’s Department booking document.
Until now, Sheriff’s Department officials have said they were not sure how many days Lohan would spend behind bars. Even though the judge called for 90 days, overcrowding in the jail typically means that inmates only serve 25% of their sentences, sometimes less.
The booking document lists Aug. 2 as the “projected release date.” A Sheriff’s Department spokesman could not immediately reached for comment. It’s possible Lohan could serve more time because judge ruled out work release or electronic monitoring in the probation-violation case.
[Updated, 3:10 p.m.: Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said Lohan could possibly serve only 13 days in jail instead of 14.
"Her projected release date is Aug. 1 or Aug. 2," he said, explaining that information initially posted on the sheriff's inmate information website was based on one 30-day sentence because a clerk missed Lohan's other two 30-day sentences.
The website was changed to reflect Lohan serving 51 days after factoring in time for good behavior. As a nonviolent female inmate, Lohan is eligible to serve only about 25% of the 51 days because of overcrowding, which brings the final figure to 13 or 14 days, Whitmore said.]
Officials said Lohan was completely cooperative when she was booked into the Century Regional Detention Facility on Tuesday morning.
After the booking, Lohan entered the jail’s triage, where she was to receive a standard medical and psychological evaluation, Sheriff’s Department spokesman Steve Whitmore told media members gathered outside the jail.
State guidelines for handling prisoners would apply to the actress, although “people with notoriety are kept away” from the general jail population for security purposes, he said.
At the Beverly Hills courthouse where Lohan surrendered shortly after 8:30 a.m. to begin serving her time, her attorney, Shawn Chapman Holley, said the actress had completed court-ordered alcohol education classes and accepted her jail term.”She is scared, as anyone would be, but she is resolute,” Holley said. “She asks for prayers and support. … She has accepted responsibility.”
Although earlier there had been confusion over which attorney would represent Lohan in court, Holley said Robert Shapiro, who at one point had said he was Lohan’s new attorney, was only a consultant to the actress.
Source: LA Times