Winona Ryder Convicted

StormMaiden

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Nov 3, 2002
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Interesting to see who her GodFather was....

BEVERLY HILLS, California (Nov. 6) - Actress Winona Ryder was convicted Wednesday of shoplifting more than $5,500 worth of high-fashion merchandise from a Saks Fifth Avenue store last year.

The jury found Ryder guilty of felony grand theft and vandalism but acquitted her of burglary.

Ryder, 31, twice an Academy Award nominee, was calm and showed no emotion. She kept her eyes trained on the jurors as they were asked whether the verdicts were accurate. They said yes.

The conviction carries a maximum sentence of three years in state prison, but Ryder could receive as little punishment as probation. Sentencing was set for Dec. 6.

She whispered to her attorney, Mark Geragos, took a drink of water and looked briefly toward her supporters in the audience.

The one count on which she was acquitted required a specific intent to go into Saks Fifth Avenue to deprive the store of property. District attorney's spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons said jurors often believe burglary is a crime of breaking and entering, but it does not require those circumstances.

''We're gratified with the verdicts,'' Gibbons said.

Ryder was arrested on Dec. 12, 2001, as she left the Beverly Hills Saks store, her arms laden with packages.

The prosecution told the jury that Ryder came to Saks with larceny on her mind, bringing shopping bags, a garment bag and scissors to snip security tags off items.

''She came, she stole, she left. End of story,'' Deputy District Attorney Ann Rundle said in her closing argument. ''Nowhere does it say people steal because they have to. People steal out of greed, envy, spite, because it's there or for the thrill.''

Jurors were shown videotape of Ryder moving through the store laden with goods, and Saks security workers testified that after she was detained, she apologetically told them a director had told her to shoplift to prepare for a movie role.

Her attorney denounced the security guards as liars even before the trial began.

At the start of her shopping trip, she paid more than $3,000 for a jacket and two blouses. The defense said Ryder believed the store would keep her account ''open'' while she shopped and would charge her later. But there was no evidence of an account.

In closing arguments Monday, defense attorney Mark Geragos suggested that the store, trying to avoid a lawsuit, conspired with employees to invent a story that would make Ryder appear to be a thief and vandal.

Geragos ridiculed the charge that Ryder vandalized merchandise by cutting holes in clothes when removing the security tags.

''This woman is known for her fashion sense,'' he said. ''Was she going to start a new line of 'Winona wear' with holes in it?''

He carried a hair bow that she allegedly had stolen over to her, placed it on her head and said, ''Can anyone see Ms. Ryder with this on top of her head? Does that make sense?''

Settlement talks between the defense and prosecution failed, but just before trial the district attorney's office agreed to dismiss a drug charge after a doctor said he had given her two pills that were found in her possession when she was arrested.

The 12-member jury included several people with Hollywood connections, among them producer Peter Guber, head of Mandalay Entertainment and a former head of Sony Entertainment Pictures.

The town raised a collective eyebrow at the inclusion of Guber, who presided over Sony when three successful Ryder films were made there.

Ryder has made some two-dozen films since 1986, including ''Beetlejuice,'' ''Heathers,'' ''Mermaids,'' ''Little Women,'' ''The Age of Innocence,'' ''Edward Scissorhands,'' ''Bram Stoker's Dracula,'' ''Reality Bites'' and ''Mr. Deeds.''

She received her Academy Award nominations for ''Little Women'' (best actress) and for ''The Age of Innocence'' (supporting actress).

Ryder was raised by parents who were part of the counterculture revolution in the 1960s. Her godfather was LSD guru Timothy Leary.

In 1993, Ryder posted a $200,000 reward in the kidnap-murder case of a 12-year-old girl, Polly Klaas, in Petaluma, California, where the actress grew up. When Ryder was charged with shoplifting, Polly's father, Mark, came to legal proceedings to support her.

In recent years, Ryder has been featured frequently in fashion magazines. Her delicate beauty and waiflike persona were on display at the trial along with a wardrobe of appropriate trial clothes - dark sweaters and skirts, soft dresses and, on the climactic day of closing arguments, a cream silk suit with a pleated skirt and short jacket.
 
She was good in Dracula. I don't believe she was trying to steal all that just to not pay for it. People that rich don't need to shoplift to get stuff, she must have had some reason.
 
Originally posted by retarded penguin
I heard she was on drugs
610_img_12.jpg


.."Drugs are bad.. m'kay."
 
Or maybe she just wanted to see if she could get away with it... She obviously didn't but that's probably cause she's not that smart. Next time you go to a store to buy a cd, try to steal it instead of paying for it and see if you get caught or not... There's quite a few creative and pretty safe ways to steal cds from stores, that's right.
 
Man, isn't that sad when fucking RICH people have to shoplift? :rolleyes:

Guerrilla: :lol: It'd take too much work to take the shrinkwrap off of the cd, take that label thing off of the top (damn those things are put on with super glue I SWEAR) and then open the case to pop off the back portion to take out that little sensor thing thats underneath there....and shoplifting is bad :p
 
There is a simpler way you know... Go to a crowded store, get like 2 cds or something and hide em somewhere on you. Get also a third cd (something like LinkinPark) and save it for later. Now as you head towards the exit, find a person that's carrying lots of bags and stuff and is getting out of the store too and stay behind him. As you walk behind him, put the Linkin Park cd in one of their bags without them seeing you and just keep walking. Now once that person goes through the exit doors and those detector thingies, the alarm will go off. The security or whatever will go check that guy and while they're busy doing that and while the alarm is still on you simply walk out the door with your precious cds. Simple.
 
Leary her godfather? Jesus christ. Poor girl

"And for your 18th birthday winona, i manufactured you some LSD"
 
I'm a little curious why the prosecution was so hot to convict her for only $5000 worth of shit. the court costs must have been many times that what with all the security for a high profile case. Then again, the prosecutor is probably trying to make himself look like a legal stud so he can run for a higher office.

she'll get probation. hell, look at that burnout Robert Downey Jr.

Originally posted by bleedingfilth
take that label thing off of the top (damn those things are put on with super glue I SWEAR)
isn't that the truth! they always have that little tab that says "pull here" or whatever, and it never works:lol:
 
...Ryder Was Observed at Other Stores...

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - Winona Ryder was observed three times by security at high-end department stores and videotaped twice in suspected shoplifting incidents before her arrest at Saks Fifth Avenue, according to secret court transcripts released Friday.

The actress was never charged in the alleged incidents at Barneys in New York and Neiman Marcus in Beverly Hills, according to the documents.

The transcripts showed that Deputy District Attorney Ann Rundle argued during a closed hearing Oct. 24 that jurors should hear about Ryder's alleged ``prior bad acts'' in judging her behavior at Saks.

The judge did not allow the incidents to be described at trial. Ryder was convicted this week of felony grand theft and vandalism for her Saks arrest.

Ryder's attorney, Mark Geragos, declined to comment late Friday, saying he didn't know the transcripts had been released.

Rundle said the three prior incidents showed Ryder behaving similarly to how she was seen committing her crimes at Saks.

``In one of our prior instances, she was seen by security selecting a hat, wandering around the store with a hat and then walking out the door with the hat on her head without paying for it,'' Rundle said, ``which is an almost identical act to what she is being charged with in this case.''

Rundle told the judge: ``We have videotapes of two prior instances wherein she is seen doing the identical conduct that they will see on the video in our case ... selecting items, concealing those items underneath heavy garment bags or underneath her own clothing, in and out of dressing rooms and ultimately walking out of the store without paying for the item.''

She said the instances occurred at Barneys of New York on May 14, 2000, and on Oct. 10, 2001, and Nov. 29 at the Neiman Marcus store in Beverly Hills.

Ryder was detained by security guards at the Beverly Hills Saks Fifth Avenue on Dec. 12, 2001, after she left the store with more than $5,500 in merchandise she had not paid for.

According to the transcripts, Rundle argued that each prior act was close in time to the date of her arrest and ``each of these acts is relevant to refute the defense that this was merely a mistake.''

Rundle said she wanted to use the prior acts to head off a defense argument that Ryder thought she had paid for the items.

``Given that defense, the people are entitled ... to refute that defense by introducing prior bad acts which show a lack of mistake,'' she said. ``They also show a very common plan or scheme in how Ms. Ryder perpetrates her thefts.''

Geragos argued against admission of the alleged incidents.

``She's never been detained. She's never been arrested. I've watched the videotape. There's nothing on the videotape,'' Geragos said, claiming the prosecution was just trying to ``throw in more garbage'' because it had a weak case.

Superior Court Judge Elden Fox ruled that the evidence could not be admitted at the trial because it would be ``far more prejudicial than probative.''

``Allowing it in ... the court believes would impair the defendant's ability to have a fair trial,'' Fox said.

How those stores handled the alleged incidents, including whether guards confronted Ryder or only observed and videotaped her, was not stated in the transcripts.

The judge released the transcripts of secret hearings in response to an appeals court decision in a case brought by The Associated Press, the Los Angeles Times and Los Angeles Daily Journal.

Ryder will be sentenced Dec. 6. Prosecutors have said they don't intend to seek jail time
 
"isn't that the truth! they always have that little tab that says "pull here" or whatever, and it never works"

There is a trick. You know how the cover is held on by those little plastic clips? Unhook the bottom one and pull the cover up. The sticker should peel off fine then.
 
heh, some think she did it just to keep her name in the media...

and i've stolen many a cd and cd player...

its cool cuz the fuckin alarm in this one sam goody ALWAYS goes off, even if what you bought got scanned and is paid for....its just all fucked....so we take advantage of that....takes 2 people min....walk out together, one with the "goods" and one with the purchase.....upon leaving guy with goods keeps walkin a bit...guy with purchase goes back like normal lets em check out the bag blah blah and off you go

course we are amateurs...

another friend of mine is a pretty good lil theif....its amazing the shit he can get