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An Abusive Silicon Valley CEO Is Going To Jail (cbslocal.com)

He'd sold his second online advertising company for $300 million at the age of 25. Six years later he was charged with 47 felonies. And now? "A Silicon Valley millionaire entrepreneur who avoided jail time for a domestic violence conviction in 2014 -- and had his probation revoked following another domestic violence incident -- was sentenced to a year in jail Friday after losing his appeal," writes CBS SF. An anonymous reader quotes their report: Gurbaksh Chahal, founder of online advertising companies Gravity4 and RadiumOne, sobbed while asking San Francisco Superior Court Judge Tracy Brown for leniency... The 36-year-old was immediately remanded into custody after Brown declined to change her ruling. Chahal must serve at least six months of the one-year sentence. He has been out of custody on $250,000 bail...

Chahal was charged with felony domestic violence in 2013 after police say he punched and kicked his girlfriend 117 times inside his San Francisco penthouse. Security camera video evidence of the attack was deemed inadmissible after a judge ruled police had obtained it without a warrant. With no video and after his girlfriend declined to cooperate with police, Chahal pleaded guilty in 2014 to two misdemeanor battery charges of domestic violence and was sentenced to three years probation.... He was accused of violating his probation in 2016 by kicking another girlfriend in the same South Beach apartment.
"Tonight he's sleeping in the big house," quipped a local TV reporter, adding "that's got to feel very different."

9 of 124 comments (clear)

  1. What a scumbag by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I doubt he’ll learn anything, but we can at least hope this might keep him from killing some future girlfriend.

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    1. Re:What a scumbag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Suuuuuuuure. Prison is a great place to learn tolerance, patience, and non violence.

      Anyway he got off with 6 months and 47 felonies. Rich and lawyered up.

    2. Re:What a scumbag by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I doubt he’ll learn anything, but we can at least hope this might keep him from killing some future girlfriend.

      At the least, it might prevent some woman from becoming his future girlfriend . . .

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      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  2. Only in America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Welcome to the U.S., where a rich person going to jail is news.

  3. Psychopaths need to die by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    One year ? Not enough. This scumbag needs to die in jail, and every single one of his offsprings needs to be sterilized, now.

    Psychopaths are the plague of humanity. They are the cause of 99% of all the pain, suffering and bloodshed on the planet. ruthless, cold, heartless CEOs, drug lords, war lords, religious cult leaders, members of criminal biker gangs, mafia, dictators, etc. All psychopaths.

    The psychopathic genetic filth must be expunged from the human genome for our species to have any chance of ever finally and completely emerging from its barbaric and savage animalistic roots.

  4. Re:Faye Weldon wrote it best... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I assure you, that man has no self control and does not "err by design". The entire description screams psychopath, narcissist and zero impulse control.

  5. Re:Immigrants behave differently ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You were doing pretty good, right up to this part:

    There's a problem -- and it seems few liberals have the sense or the strength of character to admit this, with their idiotic "kumbaya" attitude.

    Where you seem to have gone batshit crazy. Does Faux and Friends feed you this crap? Did your mother teach it to you? I wonder. I bet you don't talk like this in front of her.

    Or like this:

    ... when a drunk Mexican driver kills someone you love, you'll see the wisdom of what I wrote.

    What kind of sick fuck wishes for people to get hurt or killed to prove his or her point? Get some help man, you're really fucked up.

  6. Re:Justice system by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That always bothered me about the American legal system. Depending on the nature and type of evidence it's possible that withholding it does not serve justice.

    It serves the broader definition of "justice", even if you feel that justice isn't being done in the specific instance you're looking at.

    The US constitution, and the laws that stem from that, guarantees that people are innocent until proven guilty. Our legal system also protects against search and seizure when there's not sufficient probable cause. In the original case, the woman who got kicked was unwilling to cooperate - so what do we have? Only the word of the police, who screwed up and did not follow proper procedure in the first place.

    I don't want to live in a country where the word of a policeman legally counts more than my own word. I don't want to live in a country where my belongings can be seized and held without a warrant. I want my police to be held to a higher standard, because we've granted them a lot of power. Yes, that may mean the occasional scumbag walks away from a crime - but it beats the alternative. We've seen it over and over - people with too much power tend to abuse that power... even well-intentioned people.

    (I realize that this whole argument somewhat ignores recent history, what with secret FISA courts and secret Executive Orders - that's a whole other can of worms)

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  7. Re:Justice system by bluegutang · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The point is to deter the police from illegally collecting evidence the same way next time.

    As an alternative, perhaps the evidence should be accepted, but the police officer who collected should go to jail. I think that would be even less popular with the police, though.