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Josh & Anna Smuggar: A Series of Unfortunate Events


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(edited)
On 5/22/2021 at 5:44 PM, iwantcookies said:

Anna will probably say daddy went on a trip as a missionary to a different country. And he will be back in 10 years.

Even though I can imagine Anna saying this I doubt she will, I’ve got a feeling she’ll wanna take herself and the kids to visit Josh sometimes.Does anyone know if you’re allowed to take your kids to see their father if he gets done for child abuse?

Edited by FizzyPuff
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1 hour ago, MsJamieDornan said:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pG2H8G-4KE8&t=852s

This is very interesting. He breaks down just how many years Josh could serve when found guilty, or if he takes a plea. There's not much wiggle room with the feds.

Only about the first 12 minutes are about Josh.

I watched it a few nights ago. He explains it so well and the chart he uses makes it easy to understand how they figure out how much time behind bars is given.  It gives me hope that Josh will spend more than a couple of years in jail. 

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Quote

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pG2H8G-4KE8&t=852s

This is very interesting. He breaks down just how many years Josh could serve when found guilty, or if he takes a plea. There's not much wiggle room with the feds.

Informative video. Josh sentencing is discussed from about the 6 minute mark through about minute 14.

This guy says that the federal minimum sentencing guidelines means that, if found guilty, Josh is facing from 12 - 20 years, which may be reduced if he takes a guilty plea before trial, or the judge is lenient for a reason that they have to justify. 

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On 5/21/2021 at 9:45 AM, NotthebadVictoria said:

@hathorlive I was wondering about this too...... that is technically compensation.... ?

I would call that compensation.  I'm looking to buy a house and I need a fence for my dogs.  Fences are expensive.  So, I would view it as compensation.  But judges are weird cats.  The things they let slide shocked me.  Of course, the judge has to decide if being compensated for holding Josh is an important point at all.  

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2 hours ago, hathorlive said:

Of course, the judge has to decide if being compensated for holding Josh is an important point at all.  

Would it matter if someone was being compensated?  I'm just wondering what difference, if any, it should make.  Probably something super obvious that I am not seeing!

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12 minutes ago, WinnieWinkle said:

Would it matter if someone was being compensated?  I'm just wondering what difference, if any, it should make.  Probably something super obvious that I am not seeing!

I think the main issue is that if Jim Bob is paying the Rebers to hold Josh, they might be less likely to report any violations of the terms of his release to the courts.  After all, if JB is paying them to keep Josh, then those payments would end if Josh got tossed back into jail.

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17 minutes ago, Rootbeer said:

After all, if JB is paying them to keep Josh, then those payments would end if Josh got tossed back into jail.

Thank you. That makes a lot of sense!  I guess my POV was that you could not pay me enough money to have that slug in my house but of course that's not going to be true for everyone.

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I wonder what was Mrs. Reber’s primary objection - was it being alone with a male that is not her headship, disgust at the charges, or fear of Josh? Probably a bit of both, but I just wonder if the headship thing is more important in her mind, as I suspect it would be for some fundies (combining the whole forgiveness aspect with the it’s not a big deal/it’s the victim’s fault anyway mindset). 

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(edited)

Anna’s current state of denial doesn’t surprise me. Josh’s other acts, while disgusting, sort of pale compared to the current charges. I can understand not being able to wrap one’s head around it; hell, I can hardly believe such things exist at all and I’m a lot older and a lot more worldly. She’s been convinced that prayer conquers all, and forgiveness is everything, and Josh has been cured. Now this. It’s going to take her some time to get there, and it certainly won’t happen before the trial. Technically, we’re all supposed to believe he’s innocent at this point (I know, I know...)

Even if/when she does come to believe, of course she’ll stay in the Duggar fold. She has no options. But at least her horrible “headship” will be safely locked away.

ETA: I’d love to know who “a source” is. 

Edited by Tabbygirl521
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4 hours ago, Zella said:

I've not had time to watch the video--I want to!--but my understanding is he is looking at a minimum 5 year sentence for the receiving charge. (I don't know if that would apply to him making a plea deal.) Is that true? 

Take time to watch the video. It explains it all very well.

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1 minute ago, GeeGolly said:

I read one line from "a source" about Anna believing Josh is innocent. I didn't read the entire article because it seemed to be a rehash. Is there more to it, or is it likely click bait?

It's a rehash of everything.  The "source" also says Anna took the kids to see Josh.  Nothing else that you don't already know, but with multiple pics of Josh and ads.

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2 minutes ago, GeeGolly said:

I read one line from "a source" about Anna believing Josh is innocent. I didn't read the entire article because it seemed to be a rehash. Is there more to it, or is it likely click bait?

No new information that we haven’t discussed here. No reasoning for thinking he’s innocent. (I’m attending a virtual conference and am bored, so I read it)

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57 minutes ago, MargeGunderson said:

I would love to hear why Anna thinks he’s innocent. What is her explanation for what was found in the computer? I really want to see how she hand-waves this away. I know it will never happen but I wish it would. 

My guess is that Anna still hasn’t read or heard about the specifics of the CP Josh viewed. 

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Just now, libgirl2 said:

Even if she did (and I don't think she did), she wouldn't believe it. I do wonder though, if deep down in there somewhere she does. 

And she should be ashamed that she’s too cowardly to read the specifics. She is supposed to be protecting her soon to be 7 children. She needs to know the full, brutal truth about what he viewed.

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(edited)
5 hours ago, Zella said:

I've not had time to watch the video--I want to!--but my understanding is he is looking at a minimum 5 year sentence for the receiving charge. (I don't know if that would apply to him making a plea deal.) Is that true? 

5 years is the absolute minimum -- no matter who you are or whether you plead or don't or what your history is, if you end up guilty and being sentenced. The sentences go up from there based on a lot of very specific factors.  (And the 20 is the maximum anybody can get on this charge, including people who have a string of prior convictions for similar crimes, and so on.)  

What Scott Reisch explains in detail is how the actual sentencing guidelines that judges use to calculate a specific person's sentence depend on plugging in various facts about the defendant, the details of the crime as they committed it and their situation. 

In the video, he shows what facts the federal rules ask the judge to consider in Josh's case, according to the prosecutorial documents, and how those various facts will specifically affect the judge's actual sentence. 

Reisch concludes that, based on the charges and the facts in Josh's case, if he goes to trial and is found guilty, he'll likely get 9 to 10-and-a-half years. 

If he pleads guilty, it'll likely be 7-and-a-half to 9, he calculates.

Those numbers square with the recent sentences I saw on the Western District of Arkansas website about people with the same charges.

A federal judge is actually free to sentence people to more or less time than the standard calculations suggest (within the minimum-maximum limits for the crime) but they have to clearly explain reasons to do so, and the reasons are supposed to be compelling. Doesn't happen very often, therefore. 

The facts of Josh's case mean that he can't get five and that he would be extremely unlikely to get more than 10 and a half, largely because he has no prior criminal convictions for anything in any jurisdiction. 

 

Edited by Churchhoney
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1 hour ago, Churchhoney said:

5 years is the absolute minimum -- no matter who you are or whether you plead or don't or what your history is, if you end up guilty and being sentenced. The sentences go up from there based on a lot of very specific factors.  (And the 20 is the maximum anybody can get on this charge, including people who have a string of prior convictions for similar crimes, and so on.)  

What Scott Reisch explains in detail is how the actual sentencing guidelines that judges use to calculate a specific person's sentence depend on plugging in various facts about the defendant, the details of the crime as they committed it and their situation. 

In the video, he shows what facts the federal rules ask the judge to consider in Josh's case, according to the prosecutorial documents, and how those various facts will specifically affect the judge's actual sentence. 

Reisch concludes that, based on the charges and the facts in Josh's case, if he goes to trial and is found guilty, he'll likely get 9 to 10-and-a-half years. 

If he pleads guilty, it'll likely be 7-and-a-half to 9, he calculates.

Those numbers square with the recent sentences I saw on the Western District of Arkansas website about people with the same charges.

A federal judge is actually free to sentence people to more or less time than the standard calculations suggest (within the minimum-maximum limits for the crime) but they have to clearly explain reasons to do so, and the reasons are supposed to be compelling. Doesn't happen very often, therefore. 

The facts of Josh's case mean that he can't get five and that he would be extremely unlikely to get more than 10 and a half, largely because he has no prior criminal convictions for anything in any jurisdiction. 

 

Thanks so much--I appreciate it! I still haven't had time to watch the video, and honestly, it's easier for me to process info through reading rather than watching anyway. 

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1 hour ago, Zella said:

Thanks so much--I appreciate it! I still haven't had time to watch the video, and honestly, it's easier for me to process info through reading rather than watching anyway. 

Me, too. ....

His presentation is quite clear. But even so I could have digested it way faster reading than listening/watching. 

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(edited)

No social media platform is a great place for accepting reality, and Anna probably didn’t have a choice of which to join. There are nutjobs on all of them. Algorithms and suppression of thoughts and ideologies that the owners of any social media site don’t agree with is indoctrination.

Edited by RedDelicious
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6 minutes ago, Ohiopirate02 said:

I agree that the Duggars would only sit down for a pre-negotiated "soft" interview, but that is true for every celebrity.  When Prince Andrew did that disastrous interview in 2019, he did not expect that to be the result when he sat down.  The journalist and his/her team worked building his trust and then started to lob the hard questions.  Megyn Kelly went soft on JB and Michelle because that was always the plan from the network.  She never asked the hard questions nor did her editing team splice together any damning answers.  That was not the point of the sitdown.  The point was always to rehabilitate JB and Michelle.  

Spot on! 

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I'm putting this in the J&A thread, because it pertains to Josh. Not sure if any of you saw this on Reddit, but Pickles DM'd Jacob Wilson, demanding to know why his father didn't report Josh to the police. IMO, this is beyond shitty given that Jacob is clearly struggling with his own demons, and was a kid at the time:

Screenshot_20210525-080537_(1).thumb.png.61e4c54d85e8f934ef8d5ff3d68fb642.png

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Ref. Anna’s disbelief of the charges....I recall when Willis adult children made abuse allegations AND father Willis plead guilty, the wife stood by her husband. Yet, the adult children still embraced their mother!  I still see many loving and positive comments about their mother by the adult children on social medial!  Boggles the mind.   

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10 minutes ago, SunnyBeBe said:

Ref. Anna’s disbelief of the charges....I recall when Willis adult children made abuse allegations AND father Willis plead guilty, the wife stood by her husband. Yet, the adult children still embraced their mother!  I still see many loving and positive comments about their mother by the adult children on social medial!  Boggles the mind.   

But I think she eventually saw the light. 

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