Television pitchman Kevin Trudeau is headed to prison

Television pitchman Kevin Trudeau is headed to prison

(CNN)Kevin Trudeau, the Television pitchman and author who amassed a fortune telling consumers his secrets about how to get free money, how to lose weight and how to cure a number of illnesses the natural way, is headed to federal prison.

Trudeau, 51, was sentenced to 10 years on Monday for criminal contempt for violating a 2024 federal court order that prohibited him from making misleading infomercials and misrepresenting his weight-loss books.

During Monday’s sentencing hearing he also got a tongue-lashing from U.S. District Judge Ronald Guzman, according to the U.S. attorney’s office in Chicago.

"Since the age of 25, (Trudeau) has attempted to cheat others for his own personal gain," Guzman said.
In a sentencing memo, prosecutors called Trudeau an "unrepentant, untiring, and uncontrollable huckster who has defrauded the unsuspecting for 30 years."

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Trudeau was convicted of criminal contempt by a jury in November 2024 and has been in federal custody since his conviction.

Evidence was presented at his trial that Trudeau appeared in three infomercials in 2024 and 2024, and in those infomercials he misrepresented the contents of one of his weight-loss books.

The U.S. attorney said those infomercials were not only untrue, but they violated the 2024 court order that prohibited the infomercials.

According to his book covers, several of his books have been number one on the New York Times bestseller list.

Trudeau’s defense attorney, Tom Kirsch, told CNN on Monday night that his client intends to file a notice of appeal in the case.

Here’s John Stossel’s 20/20exposé

2010: Trudeau in contempt of court

Club Kid Michael Alig to be released from prison

Club Kid Michael Alig to be released from prison

I would hope he’d be smart enough to stay far away from clubs.

Club Kid Founder Michael Alig To Be Released From Prison: “No Chance†He Will Party / Queerty

Club Kid Founder Michael Alig To Be released from Prison: “No Chance” He Will Party
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Richie Rich and Michael Alig

Michael Alig, the quintessential party boy who reigned supreme over New York City’s gay party scene throughout the early ’90s, is due to be released from jail on May 5, according to a personal friend reporting for BlackBook.

Alig is credited with fueling the early days of the “club kid” scene and throwing some of the greatest and most historical gay events in a pre-Giuliani New York City. His life and conviction inspired the Fenton Bailey-directed movie Party Monster, which detailed the events leading up to March 17, 1996 — the day Alig murdered and dismembered the **** of his drug dealer Angel Melendez in the apartment they shared.

Alig’s arrest was largely credited to Michael Musto’s unrelenting reporting for the Village Voice at the time. The investigation also led to the arrest of Peter Gatien, a legendary New York Club owner who is now banned from entering the United States.

Alig has been up for parole several times since 2024, but was allegedly denied after his parole officers obtained and watched a copy of Party Monster. (FYI, for those interested, a more informational ********ary about Alig’s life was released in 1998, called Party Monster: The Shocukmentary. It’s available to stream on YouTube.)

According to BlackBook writer Steve Lewis, Alig has been recruited for creative jobs and will stay with a friend once released from prison. “There is no chance that he will return to clubs as a way of life,” he says, “but he will paint and write, and as always, try to impact the way we think.” Alig has reportedly “never used a computer or cell phone, but has remained keenly aware of the world we live in.”

Furthermore, after several visits in the past few years, Lewis believes Alig has been rehabilitated:

I was for many years Michael’s friend. Like so many others, I left him behind when drugs and power created a “Party Monster.” We reconnected in recent years, and during my visits to him in prison I observed the Michael Alig that I loved—the Alig prior the downfall. I believe he is ready to enter the world, and that reentering will be a good thing. No one, no act, no time, no hatred will bring back Angel, but Michael has served a great deal of his adult life in a bad place. I believe he has been rehabilitated. I believe he is forever remorseful and I look forward to his redux. To those who say nay, I respect that, but hope chances are given, and that we can move on. It is a time to remember Angel and reflect on the meaning of life. For me, forgiveness is part of it.

Below, watch a trailer for Party Monster, the 2024 film inspired by Michael Alig’s life.

What Louis Theroux fears more than prison inmates and Neo-Nazis

What Louis Theroux fears more than prison inmates and Neo-Nazis

What Louis Theroux fears more than prison inmates and Neo-Nazis

No ******s | Perth Now

July 12,2020 2:00am
Debbie SchippNews Corp Australia Network

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Deeply confronting: Theroux during filming of By Reason of Insanity. Supplied by BBC

HE’S the self-effacing Englishman who has transcended geeky journo to become a master ********ary maker with so much clout he’s being investigated by Scientology.

But ask Louis Theroux, 45, What he’s feared most in more than 15 years covering subjects including America’s worst prisons, Neo-Nazi culture, white supremacists and paedophilia and you get a surprising answer.

“There are sometimes moments where you do get nervous. I did a thing on Neo-Nazis and that was stressful and I went to a big skinhead event and I thought there might be a chance something would happen there,” Theroux says.

“Prisons and jails I tend to feel that you’re actually safer as a journalist than you might think, certainly more than it appears.

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Safer than you think: Theroux in his ********ary, Behind Bars. Picture: Supplied

“Funnily enough the most danger I felt was when I did a story about exotic animals kept as pets in America.

“And I kept hearing: ‘I could be in a cage with a tiger all day, but I won’t go near a chimpanzee’. The cliche I heard a lot was that they’ll rip your arm off and beat you to death with it.”
Theroux’s off-beat humor surfaces.

“And I don’t want to discredit or cast aspersions on the chimpanzee population, but I think they are so bored and so intelligent and they live to be about 60 years old and they just get angry.
“When it was time to meet a chimpanzee I got very, very anxious because they have the strength of ten men, so I hear.

“They bite your genitals off, I hear, and they bite your nose off, and because I have quite a big nose, I always thought one might see my nose and it might be too tempting to resist.”

Theroux’s greatest gift is his gentle, unassuming mask of neutrality and whip-smart intelligence, which sees him ask questions about the ‘elephant in the room’, and elicit honest rather than angry responses. His subjects may baulk, but they still answer.

In the case of the first of his two upcoming ********aries, By Reason of Insanity, the result is raw, unflinching storytelling.

Theroux spends a month immersed in Ohio’s State Psychiatric Hospitals, where his subjects have been incarcerated and are being treated after being found not guilty of horrific crimes ‘by reason of insanity’.

As schizophrenic Jonathan calmly, clinically, and without a trace of empathy recounts slitting his father’s throat seven years earlier in a paranoid rage, Theroux confesses part of him wants to see ‘more grief’.

He also asks Jonathon did he love his father — something the inmate confesses he’s never been asked in seven years of treatment.
It’s deeply confronting. And you can’t look away.

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Curious about extremes: Theroux in a scene from The Most Hated family in America. Picture: Supplied’.

Theroux chooses difficult, confronting subjects because ‘there is something in me which is curious about both extremes of behaviour extremes of emotion — things that are difficult to deal with that are painful and bring us into conflict with ourselves’.

“And then on the other hand I choose them to try to sort of make connections with people and understand them.

“It’s in the DNA of all the shows that I have done that are about people that are dealing with very stressful situations that are giving them a lot of angst. Why I respond to that on a deeper level is hard to answer.”

“In this ********ary there’s a couple of those moments that stand out, really, for me.

“One is how does a nice person — a person who seems to be polite, sensitive, empathetic end up brutally murdering their father? That’s the big one.

“The other is how do you decide with someone who appears to be cured, how do you take responsibility for unleashing him or her on the world given that they’ve done something hideous in the past?”

“You see in the interview with Jonathan, this young man who is on the one hand obliging and answers the questions and appears to be sincerely attempting to engage with me in a dialogue, and then on the other hand he stabbed his father to death.

“Towards the end of the interview, rather than pretend this is all quite normal, I called attention to the fact that he is talking about something that is absolutely hideous and yet wasn’t showing much emotion.”

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Offbeat fare: Theroux doing publicity for one if his earlier series, Louis Theroux Weird Weekends. Picture: Supplied

Theroux is currently putting the final touches to his latest ********ary on Scientology; a project that has resulted in the powerful religion saying it is making its own ********ary on him.

It’s a common tactic from Scientology when journalists attempt to delve into its workings, and Theroux is unfazed.

“One of the things I have always enjoyed about Scientology is their proactive approach to journalists who are covering them,” he says.

“In an odd way it’s kind of a privilege to feel as though I’m on their radar.”

LOUIS THEROUX: BY REASON OF INSANITY, WEDNESDAY, 8.30PM, BBC KNOWLEDGE

Woman who drove with dying man on car gets prison

Woman who drove with dying man on car gets prison


LOS ANGELES (AP) — A substance-abuse counselor was sentenced Thursday to 55 years to life in prison for hitting a pedestrian with her car and driving through a Los Angeles suburb with the dying man on her windshield.

A jury earlier this year convicted Sherri Lynn Wilkins, 53, of second-degree murder, driving under the influence and hit-and-run.
Prosecutors said Wilkins’ blood-alcohol level was nearly twice the legal limit when she struck 31-year-old Phillip Moreno in November 2024 as she was leaving a counseling center.
She drove 2 miles through the city of Torrance before other motorists swarmed her car at a traffic light and kept her there until police arrived. Moreno was taken to a hospital, where he died.
Superior Court Judge Henry Hall said, "Ms. Wilkins demonstrated an extraordinary callousness in fleeing the scene and trying to shake Mr. Moreno’s **** off her car. This is a callous murder, not an unfortunate act."
Hall rejected a request from the defense and sentenced Wilkins under California’s three strikes law, citing her long history of drug-related crimes. That tripled the minimum 15 years to life she otherwise could have received before being eligible for parole.
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Sherri Lynn Wilkins gets emotional in court during sentencing Thursday June 12, 2024 in Los Angeles. …

Wilkins, who was a drug addict before she became a drug and alcohol counselor, contended she wasn’t drunk that night. She claimed she was "self-medicating" while waiting for knee-replacement surgery and had consumed three single-serving bottles of vodka and a can of Budweiser beer and Clamato before starting to drive.
In her first apology since that night, Wilkins turned toward 16 Moreno family members and friends in the courtroom Thursday and said what happened was a "tragedy."
"I am sorry for the pain I caused you," she said. "It hurt so many people."
The judge said he carefully considered the three strikes element.
"Ms. Wilkins is not what we normally see," Hall said. "She’s not a classic violent criminal. But you have to evaluate her history. She had an insatiable desire to become intoxicated."
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Sherri Lynn Wilkins sits in court during sentencing Thursday June 12, 2024 in Los Angeles. Wilkins, …

She also had a "relatively unbroken crime history" dating back 34 years, he said.
Wilkins’ attorney, Deputy Public Defender Nan Whitfield, said she would appeal.
"Because this case was so emotionally charged," she told the judge, "the jury was unable to see the evidence."
Outside court, Whitfield said, "No**** likes a drunk driver. Because she was a drug and alcohol counselor, she’s held to a higher standard."
Deputy District Attorneys John Harland and Sam Ahmadpour said jurors evaluated the evidence carefully.
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Sherri Lynn Wilkins gets emotional in court during sentencing Thursday June 12, 2024 in Los Angeles. …

"Everyone is a human being and you have emotions, but this was not ****d on emotion," said Harland.
Wilkins testified during the trial that she never saw Moreno coming, and it was as if he fell from the sky. The defense argued Moreno was drunk and jumped on Wilkins’ car and that she panicked.
The judge called that theory "fanciful" and an effort by Wilkins to evade responsibility.
Two family members and a friend of Moreno on Thursday angrily denounced Wilkins. Friend Victor Gasset said, "Phillip was 31. You were getting high longer than he was alive."
Moreno’s brother, Tony, told her she deserves to "rot in prison the rest of your life."
Moreno’s niece, Alyssa Moreno, told Wilkins: "You made sure Phillip went without any goodbyes. I wish the same for you. As of today, you will no longer exist to society. You will be just a number."

Silk Road Creator, Ross Ulbricht, Sentenced to Life in Prison .

Silk Road Creator, Ross Ulbricht, Sentenced to Life in Prison (with No Parole).

Silk Road Creator Ross Ulbricht Sentenced to Life in Prison

Silk Road Creator Ross Ulbricht Sentenced to Life in Prison | WIRED

  • Andy Greenberg
  • Date of Publication: 05.29.15. 05.29.15
  • Time of Publication: 4:03 pm. 4:03 pm

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Courtesy Ulbricht Family

Ross Ulbricht conceived of his Silk Road black market as an online utopia beyond law enforcement’s reach. Now he’ll spend the rest of his Life firmly in its grasp, locked inside a federal penitentiary.

On Friday Ulbricht was Sentenced to Life in Prison without the possibility of parole for his role in creating and running Silk Road’s billion-dollar, anonymous black market for drugs. Judge Katherine Forrest gave Ulbricht the most severe sentence possible, beyond what even the prosecution had explicitly requested. The minimum Ulbricht could have served was 20 years.

“The stated purpose [of the Silk Road] was to be beyond the law. In the world you created over time, democracy didn’t exist. You were captain of the ship, the Dread Pirate Roberts,” she told Ulbricht as she read the sentence, referring to his pseudonym as the Silk Road’s leader. “Silk Road’s birth and presence asserted that its…creator was better than the laws of this country. This is deeply troubling, terribly misguided, and very dangerous.”

In addition to his Prison sentence, Ulbricht was also ordered to pay a massive restitution of more than $183 million, what the prosecution had estimated to be the total sales of illegal drugs and counterfeit IDs through the Silk Road—at a certain bitcoin exchange rate—over the course of its time online. Any revenue from the government sale of the bitcoins seized from the Silk Road server and Ulbricht’s laptop will be applied to that debt.

Ulbricht had stood before the court just minutes earlier in navy blue Prison clothes, pleading for a lenient sentence. “I’ve changed. I’m not the man I was when I created Silk Road,” he said, as his voice grew hoarse with emotion and cracked. “I’m a little wiser, a little more mature, and much more humble.”

“I wanted to empower people to make choices in their lives…to have privacy and anonymity,” Ulbricht told the judge. “I’m not a sociopathic person trying to express some inner badness.”

Ulbricht’s sentencing likely puts the final seal on the saga of Silk Road, the anarchic underground market the 31-year-old Texan created in early 2024. At its peak, the Dark Web site grew to a sprawling smorgasbord of every narcotic imaginable—before Ulbricht was arrested in a public library in San Francisco in October of 2024. Eighteen months later, he was convicted in a Manhattan court on seven felony charges, including conspiracies to traffic in narcotics and launder money, as well as a “kingpin” charge usually reserved for the leaders of organized crime groups.

Two of those seven charges were deemed redundant and dropped by the prosecution just days before the sentencing, though that technical change to the charges didn’t lessen Ulbricht’s mandatory minimum sentence—or his ultimate punishment.

Ulbricht’s defense team has already said it will seek an appeal in his case. That call for a new trial will be based in part on recent revelations that two Secret Service and Drug Enforcement Administration agents involved in the investigation of the Silk Road allegedly stole millions of dollars of bitcoin from the site. One of the agents is even accused of blackmailing Ulbricht, and of allegedly selling him law enforcement information as a mole inside the DEA. But the judge in Ulbricht’s case ruled that those Baltimore-based agents weren’t involved in the New York FBI-led investigation that eventually took down the Silk Road, preventing their alleged corruption from affecting Ulbricht’s fate.

Speaking to press after the sentencing, Ulbricht’s lead attorney Joshua Dratel said that Forrest’s sentence was “unreasonable, unjust, unfair and based on improper consideration with no basis in fact or law.” He added: “I’m disappointed tremendously.”

In emotional statements at the hearing, the parents of drug users who had overdosed and died from drugs purchased from the Silk Road called for a long sentence for Ulbricht. “I strongly believe my son would still be alive today if Mr. Ulbricht had never created Silk Road,” said one father whose 25-year old son had died from an overdose of heroin, requesting “the most severe sentence the law will allow.”

In the weeks leading up to his sentencing hearing, Ulbricht’s defense team attempted to lighten his punishment with arguments about his motives and character, as well as emphasizing the Silk Road’s positive effect on its drug-using customers. In more than a hundred letters, friends, family, and even fellow inmates pointed to Ulbricht’s idealism and lack of a criminal history. And the defense argued that Silk Road had actually reduced harm in the drug trade by ensuring the purity of the drugs sold on the site through reviews and ratings, hosting discussions on “safe” drug use, and giving both buyers and sellers an avenue to trade in narcotics while avoiding the violence of the streets.

But the prosecution countered that any protection the Silk Road offered drug users was dwarfed by the increased access it offered to dangerous and addictive drugs. And beyond the two parents who spoke at the Friday hearing, it pointed to six individuals who it claimed had died of drug overdoses from drugs purchased on the Silk Road.

In her statement preceding Ulbricht’s sentencing, Judge Forrest fully sided with the prosecution against the defense’s “harm reduction” argument, arguing that the Silk Road vastly expanded access to drugs. “Silk Road was about fulfilling demand, and it was about creating demand,” she said. “It was market-expanding.”

She also tore into the argument that the Silk Road reduced violence in the drug trade, pointing out that most of the academic papers submitted by the defense to support that argument focused only on the protection for the final buyer of drugs. But that digital remove, she argued, did nothing to prevent violence at any other point in the narcotics supply chain, from production to distribution. “The idea that it’s harm reducing is so very narrow,” she said. “It’s…about a privileged group, sitting in their own homes, with their high speed internet connections.”

The Justice Department also argued in their letter to Judge Forrest that Ulbricht should be made an example of to stop even more Dark Web market kingpins from following in his footsteps. After all, dozens of copycat sites and advancements on the Silk Road market model have sprouted in the years since its takedown, including the Silk Road 2, Evolution, and the currently largest Dark Web black market to survive law enforcement’s attacks, Agora. To combat the spread of those anonymous bazaars, prosecutors asked Judge Forrest to “send a clear message” with a sentence for Ulbricht well beyond the mandatory minimum.

Judge Forrest sided with the prosecution on that point, too, arguing that she needed to create a strong deterrent for the next Dread Pirate Roberts. “For those considering stepping into your shoes…they need to understand without *****ocation that there will be severe consequences,” Forrest said.

The defense’s arguments about Ulbricht’s character and his idealistic motives were also undercut by accusations that Ulbricht had paid for the murder of six people, including a potential informant and a blackmailer. Those accusations never became formal charges in Ulbricht’s case—five out of six of the murder-for-hires appear to have been part of a lucrative scam targeting Ulbricht, with no actual victims.

But those murder accusations nonetheless deeply colored Ulbricht’s trial, and strongly influenced his sentence. “I find there is ample and unambiguous evidence that [Ulbricht] commissioned five murders to protect his commercial enterprise,” Forrest said, leaving out one alleged attempted murder for which Ulbricht was charged in a different case.

With those attempted murders as con****, Forrest was merciless in her assessment of Ulbricht’s seeming multiple personalities: the altruistic and admirable young man described in the letters sent to her as evidence of his character, versus the callous drug lord she saw in his actions. “People are very complicated, and you are one of them,” she said simply. “There is good in you, Mr. Ulbricht. There is also bad. And what you did with the Silk Road was terribly destructive.”

In his own letter to the judge ahead of sentencing, Ulbricht took a more personal tact, promising that he had learned that the Silk Road was a “terrible mistake” and a “very naive and costly idea” that he regretted and wouldn’t repeat. He pleaded for a chance at freedom in the decades after his incarceration.

“I’ve had my youth, and I know you must take away my middle years, but please leave me my old age,” he wrote. “Please leave a small light at the end of the tunnel, an excuse to stay healthy, an excuse to dream of better days ahead, and a chance to redeem myself in the free world before I meet my maker.”

But in her sentencing statement, Forrest denied even that the Silk Road was a naive experiment, or some sort of youthful mistake. “It was a carefully planned life’s work. It was your opus,” she said. “You wanted it to be your legacy. And it is.”

Lorraine Barwell, 1st prison custody officer to die in the line of duty, man charged.

Lorraine Barwell, 1st prison custody officer to die in the line of duty, man charged.

Custody officer Lorraine Barwell died from head injury

  • 7 July2020
  • From the section London

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Mother-of-two Lorraine Barwell died from a serious head injury A custody officer who was attacked outside a court in central London died from a serious head injury, tests have found.
Lorraine Barwell, 54, was attacked as she escorted a prisoner from Blackfriars Crown Court to a van on 29 June. She died on Friday.
Post-mortem examination tests show the provisional cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head, the Met said.
Humphrey Burke, 22, is accused of grievous bodily harm.
Mr Burke, of no fixed address, appeared at Camberwell Green Magistrates’ Court on 1 July. He was remanded in custody to appear at the Old Bailey on 15 July.
Ms Barwell, from Romford, east London, worked for the services company Serco for more than 10 years.
The Ministry of Justice and Serco said she was the first prison custody officer to die in the line of duty.
Scotland Yard, Serco and the Ministry of Justice are investigating Ms Barwell’s death.

Man charged with custody officer murder

  • 6 minutes ago
  • From the section London

Lorraine Barwell had worked at Serco for more than a decade A man has been charged with the murder of a prisoner custody officer who was attacked outside a court in London.
Humphrey Burke, 22, of no fixed abode, has been charged with the murder of Lorraine Barwell, the Crown Prosecution Service said.

Ms Barwell, from Romford, east London, was attacked as she escorted a prisoner from Blackfriars Crown Court to a van on 29 June. She died on 3 July.
The 54-year-old worked for the services company Serco for more than 10 years.
The Ministry of Justice and Serco said she was the first prison custody officer to die in the line of duty.

Post-mortem examination tests showed the provisional cause of her death was blunt force trauma to the head, the Met Police said.
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Lorraine Barwell was attacked as she escorted a prisoner from Blackfriars Crown Court