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Judge's gavel pierces hearts of young couple
On Valentine's Day, a jurist doesn't give in to a Pasco couple's plea for delayed sentencing.
By John Frank, Times Staff Writer
Published February 15, 2008
BROOKSVILLE - St. Valentine is no match for steel-hearted justice.
See, the law is stale, rigid and aloof. It doesn't recognize holidays, especially Hallmark-generated affairs like Valentine's Day.
Jesse James Dunn learned this lesson Thursday morning in Circuit Judge Jack Springstead's courtroom. The 22-year-old Pasco County man stood for a day of reckoning on charges that he violated the terms of his probation on battery charges.
For more than the obvious reasons, Dunn didn't want to be there. In the first row of benches sat his fiancee, Kristina Walton of Moon Lake, 24, nearly eight months pregnant and crying uncontrollably.
With each big sob, he turned to Walton and mouthed words only she could understand.
Dunn, facing significant prison time, asked for the lightest possible punishment, 18 months behind bars. He got it.
But what he wanted more than anything was a delayed sentencing - another month before his prison term started so he see the birth of the couple's second child.
The judge, cloaked in black and wielding a gavel, is not a Cupid with love-tipped arrows. He said no.
Through his attorney, Dunn asked to put the case off until the end of the trial docket, begging for just a few more hours with his fiancee.
Again, the judge said no.
"The moment has come," Judge Jack Springstead said.
Dunn turned to Walton and gave a pitiful, powerless frown. The sobs from the front row grew louder. After the couple locked eyes one last time, Dunn was led away in handcuffs.
The clash of the law's cold standard and the couple's raw affection brought overcast looks to faces in the courtroom.
"It's Valentine's Day. It's so sad," said Sherry Walton, Kristina's mom, who was also in court.
Afterward, Springstead explained he doesn't like to delay sentencing. He learned his lesson years ago when he made an exception only to have the defendant commit another crime in between court appearances.
"The message is he got treated like everyone else," the judge said. "Maybe it isn't the best timing, but the court doesn't tell them when to get violated" on their probation.
This most recent mess started shortly before Dunn's 19th birthday, when he got into a fight and broke another guy's jaw. Authorities said it wasn't self-defense and Dunn pleaded no contest to battery charges.
He received five years house arrest, but was arrested repeatedly for violating probation. At one point, his probation officer cited him for leaving the house to take Kristina's son to the hospital when he had a fever of 103 degrees.
In the end, it all added up and Dunn knew prison time was next. He and Kristina just wanted more time.
[Last modified February 14, 2008, 23:27:36]
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by Bob
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02/15/08 08:57 PM
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I don't get the point. He committed a crime and got locked up for it. What is SPT up to here? Trying to give sympathy to a habitual offender? Sorry, none here.
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by Stina
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02/15/08 12:02 PM
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He knew the consequesnces when he hit the guy, violated probation and knocked up his girlfriend twice (birth control???). Clearly this guy is an immature idiot who can't on track and set himself straight. Maybe he needs prison!
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by wazzamattaU
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02/15/08 10:28 AM
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Another 'fiance'..... with two kids? How about some birth control for these idiots? And the Times is (again) sympathetic to these two 'victims'.
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by jan
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02/15/08 09:42 AM
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Sounds like he had enough time, enough chances. I don't blame the judge one bit. If you can't behave when you are on probation, then you need to be jailed. The guy broke a man's jaw. That wasn't exactly a valentine kiss he gave the victim's jaw.
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by Sal
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02/15/08 07:02 AM
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This is a non-story, do wrong, get locked up. So simple...
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by Larry
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02/15/08 05:20 AM
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He should have thought of all the potential conquences before he violated his probation.
Send him to jail! This story is a waste of newspaper space.
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