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Lindsay Lohan will reject plea deal
Lindsay due in court today and is likely to be sent to jail for probation violation
Talks breakdown between Lohan's camp and prosecution - 'there will be NO plea deal'
Jewellery store owners set to auction the necklace off

She’s certainly no stranger to life behind bars and she has been adamant she will not be returning.

Lindsay Lohan, who is appearing in court today, will not be accepting a plea deal that will send her to jail in a grand theft case, is believed.

The Mean Girls star has pleaded not guilty to a felony grand theft that was filed after a jewelry store reported the starlet had taken $2,500 necklace without permission.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Keith L. Schwartz has said if Lohan accepts a plea agreement offered by prosecutors last month that he will send her to jail for the fourth time in as many years.

A source close to the actress said that Lohan does not intend to accept the plea offer at Thursday's hearing. The source spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of Lohan's case.

U.S. website TMZ have posted contradicting reports and said that Lindsay is considering accepting a plea.

The gossip site posted: 'The fact that Lindsay is actually thinking about accepting Judge Schwartz' offer is a huge step -- because she has been adamant up to this point that she will NOT go back to jail.'


Schwartz will lay out the next steps of the case and may schedule a preliminary hearing during which prosecutors will present their evidence.

If Lohan is ordered to stand trial Schwartz has warned the starlet that she may be sent to jail for violating her probation on a 2007 drunken driving case.
Lohan's return to court comes days after surveillance footage of her trying on necklaces at Kamofie & Co., which reported the necklace stolen on Jan. 22. It was eventually given by a Lohan associate to detectives, who had already obtained a search warrant for the actress' Venice home.

Entertainment Tonight aired the footage, which showed Lohan texting, pacing and talking to a store clerk for nearly 45 minutes. The actress wore the necklace she is accused of stealing for roughly 25 minutes, according to the show, before the clerk escorted Lohan out, smiled and held a door open as she walked out.

The footage was obtained by a commercial images division of the AP and licensed exclusively to Entertainment Tonight.

The source told said that Lohan's defense team thinks the video's release and its sale will benefit the actress' defense.

Lohan's court troubles have long overshadowed her once-promising acting career. A former star in Disney films such as ‘Freaky Friday’ and ‘Herbie Fully Loaded,’ her career has been stalled since she was arrested twice in 2007 and later charged with drunken driving and drug possession.

In the past 10 months, Lohan has been jailed twice and sent to rehab twice for probation violations. A judge ordered her to undergo three months of treatment at the

Betty Ford Center, and it was within three weeks of her release that she was accused of stealing the necklace.

While the theft case has caused more uncertainty for Lohan, 24, the incident may go on to benefit others.

The owners of Kamofie & Co. announced Wednesday that they will auction the necklace and donate the proceeds to an unspecified charity after the theft case is resolved. The item remains in the custody of authorities.

‘We have already publicly released the videotape which speaks for itself and accurately records the incident, and we believe the next step toward achieving closure is to donate the now-famous jewelry to charity,’ store owners Sofia and Geoff Kaman said in a statement released Wednesday morning.







Source: Dailymail

Loughner Gets New Charges
Federal prosecutors say they will file new murder charges against Jared Loughner, the 22-year-old college dropout held in the Tucson massacre.

Dennis Burke, the U.S. attorney for Arizona, last week asked a judge to drop earlier charges in the slayings of U.S. District Judge John Roll and congressional aide Gabriel Zimmerman Jan 8.

Spokesman Robbie Sherwood told the Tucson Sentinel it was a "procedural matter" and the counts will be refiled before a March 9 status conference on the case.

Loughner also is charged with four other killings, the attempted assassination of U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., and the wounding of a dozen other people in a shooting spree at a constituents gathering outside a Tucson supermarket.

Federal jurisdiction in the case derives from the killing or attempted killing of federal judges, members of Congress and their aides in the course of their duties.

The two murder charges could lead prosecutors to seek the death penalty. The U.S. attorney's office in Phoenix has said prosecutors are taking their time with the murder charges since they may involve capital punishment.
Read More: Upi

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