这一点我同意AOC# Joke - 肚皮舞运动
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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez slams Felicity Huffman's lenient prison sentence
amid reports actress could face just 0-6 months
Last week it was announced that Felicity Huffman intends to strike a plea
deal for her involvement in the college admissions fraud scheme Operation
Varsity Blues, in which she’s accused of paying $15,000 to have her
daughter Sophia’s SAT scores falsified.
Many are speculating over how much jail time the actress is facing, with
federal prosecutors reportedly recommending a sentencing guideline of four
to 10 months. Now comes word that the former Desperate Housewives star could
face no more than six months.
That’s not good enough for Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. The freshman
congresswoman responded to NBC News investigative journalist Tom Winter’s
tweet about Huffman potentially getting a sentence of zero to six months by
pointing out the double standards for criminals of “wealth and privilege.”
The New York Democrat accused the justice system — which she called a “
class enforcement system” — of treating people of color and low-income
citizens more harshly than those, like Huffman, with power and money.
amid reports actress could face just 0-6 months
Last week it was announced that Felicity Huffman intends to strike a plea
deal for her involvement in the college admissions fraud scheme Operation
Varsity Blues, in which she’s accused of paying $15,000 to have her
daughter Sophia’s SAT scores falsified.
Many are speculating over how much jail time the actress is facing, with
federal prosecutors reportedly recommending a sentencing guideline of four
to 10 months. Now comes word that the former Desperate Housewives star could
face no more than six months.
That’s not good enough for Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. The freshman
congresswoman responded to NBC News investigative journalist Tom Winter’s
tweet about Huffman potentially getting a sentence of zero to six months by
pointing out the double standards for criminals of “wealth and privilege.”
The New York Democrat accused the justice system — which she called a “
class enforcement system” — of treating people of color and low-income
citizens more harshly than those, like Huffman, with power and money.