Not that I want to see her in jail at all, and I hope she bot gets the help she needs and it makes a difference to change her life for the better, but had Jennifer Lien been Jane Citizen and not a former celebrity, I doubt the that the state would be going this far to help her. So, she is lucky in that respect, and hopefully she takes advantage of this opportunity to turn her life around.
Yes a former celebrity, but no Dana Plato or Gary Coleman. In fact, her decline and change in physical appearance, both lent to the reality that from what I've read in the past, very few people in the communities that she lived in Tennessee were at all aware of her presence, let alone her former identity. This is someone who has fallen off the face of the earth and the consideration given her by the state seems to genuinely be a recognition of the gross seriousness of her ilness(es). Certainly some people with the same degree of dysfunction and deterioration don't get these chances she has been afforded, but is there any real compulsion for the authorities to be playing the name game in this circumstance, with an indigent person, who possesses nothing, and lives in squalor?
^ I agree with everything you say; but for the minor hint of special celebrity treatment. I've seen nothing here beyond the standard operating procedures oulined by the involved institutions on state websites; and repeated for countless other offenders every day.
The only real wiggle room here was in the police response for ramming the cruiser - and even then, police are mandated to use only the force necessary to control a situation. Ideally, every bullet is weighed against that condition, and you can see why cops would exhaust nonlethal options before lethal. I very much doubt they would factor in persona in their immediate response to a car ramming.
If there is any official celebrity favor being dealt here, it would seem to be limited to maintaining privacy of her status.
You are exactly on point here, Triskelion!!!!
