Recovered/Located AL - Casey White, prisoner, & Vicky Sue White, CO w/sher office, Lauderdale, 29 Apr'22 *Reward* #4

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In North Carolina, it's 6 months or less=county jail time. 6 months+1 day=NCDOC


that's a short sentence to transport and process someone into the state system for.

Although it's good for the prisoners: difficult to earn good time credit in most states in county lockup.

That's why a lot of experienced criminals when they get arrested will be in a hurry to take a plea and get to state prison where they can start earning good time credits like crazy; especially in states like Alabama and Tennessee that have generous good time credit programs. No point spending a year or two waiting for trial when if you take a plea and get sentenced and sent to state prison you'll likely be released on good time not long after your trial would have happened.

Plus as others pointed out in this thread life in state prison tends to be better than county lockup, due to more opportunities for work and education and recreation.
 
that's a short sentence to transport and process someone into the state system for.

Although it's good for the prisoners: difficult to earn good time credit in most states in county lockup.

That's why a lot of experienced criminals when they get arrested will be in a hurry to take a plea and get to state prison where they can start earning good time credits like crazy; especially in states like Alabama and Tennessee that have generous good time credit programs. No point spending a year or two waiting for trial when if you take a plea and get sentenced and sent to state prison you'll likely be released on good time not long after your trial would have happened.

Plus as others pointed out in this thread life in state prison tends to be better than county lockup, due to more opportunities for work and education and recreation.
Yes, that plays out to be true here as well. As far as the 6 months threshold, I have known of a few instances, where a judge has passed sentences of 6 months and 1 day....just to ensure the offender went to a State Prison and not County Jail.
 
It would depend on how they stacked em: concurrent or consecutive?

Absent CW going off and killing someone, I don't imagine any of VW's state charges would be for more than a 10 year term individually. if they were sentenced to be served concurrently, she'd still be out in 3 years and change.

If the Feds decide to hit her with charges, it's a different ballgame. Good time credit maxes out at 15% in the Federal system--so you have to serve at least 85% of your Federal sentence. And of course there is no parole in the Federal system. I think Federal weapons charges would probably the most serious with the longest actual time served VW might end up facing at this point, assuming no other crimes committed while on the run.

They could both prosecute her and make her serve one after the other, that'd lead to the greatest time served in prison.
I've also wondered if they could hit her for federal structuring charges, based on her use of multiple banks both for the deposit and withdrawal of funds, presumably to keep the amounts hidden from LE. Of course that would depend on whether any/all of those transactions were less than $10k.
 
I would think that would be a gray area. Who took? Who gave? Not something that could be proven, IMO.
Maybe. She has her jail issued firearm and they believe she has the gun(s) she personally bought that were licensed to her too. Since he wouldn’t have had any as a felon in the cell where she found him, I think it’d be an open and shut case that she’s the one in the giving position.
 
I haven’t seen any mention of her leaving behind her work-firearm. (Radio and handcuffs, yes.) In fact, I think that the very first reports said that, since she had a handgun, we could assume that he was armed. (And those reports were well before we heard that she’d bought extra weapons.)
Correction officers are generally unarmed except for pepper spray or other nonlethal means of self defense. That's one reason prisoners are not escorted alone. CO's may have weapons training but carrying a weapon introduces extra threat for the officer.

CO & deputy have been equated in this thread but their training and responsibilities and working conditions are not the same.

My nephew was a CO in a Texas prison and felt his martial arts training was a valuable tool but it wasn't required training. He got injured by an unruly prisoner on a mental health hold.

Just my 2 cents

Edit: spelling
 
And I have to say you guys…. His current released mug shot looks terrible but she has been “with” him for two years now. Some of these past pictures look pretty darn cute so I can almost see what VW saw in him. Especially if he acted as well-mannered in jail as he has been reported. Plus as someone posted earlier, if he tended to cozy up to prison employees as a habit. He has a disarming smile and a boyish face. Hate to say it…but I can see it.
 
They’ll throw the whole book at her. They’ll want to send a message to guards everywhere that you can’t just brazenly use your government issued weapon, patrol car, badge and position to help inmates escape. She’ll be made an example IMO.
 
If only he could do something about those ears, dead give away. Maybe if he wore some heavy framed glasses that extended out to the sides they'd cover up the ears a bit.
If he had smaller ears and she had a more average smile/teeth/lips, it would be much easier on both of them. She could even wear tall platform shoes and a long summer skirt to help with her height.
 
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