Should Lindsay Lohan Pull a Polanski?

Thumbnail image for LindsayLo_Jean_57011015_400.jpgA judge in L.A. today issued a warrant for Lindsay Lohan's arrest when the starlet failed to show for a mandatory "DUI progress-report hearing." By now Lohan's excuse is relatively well-known: She was visiting Cannes and, er, her passport was stolen. Her team says she's spent the last few days working with the State Department to get a replacement (the U.S. Embassy in France denies this), while French authorities say she never even reported the original stolen in the first place. As a result of the warrant, says the U.S. Customs Agency, Lohan will be arrested when attempting to reenter the country. Which of course raises the question: Why even bother coming home?

After all, I think we all know the precedent here for celebrity fugitives. Taking after Roman Polanski, Lohan could settle in France for a while, restoring herself and her career away from the bad influences and ghosts of the States -- and out of reach of the authorities. The obvious catch here is Lohan's U.S. citizenship -- France refused to extradite Polanski for three decades because they don't ship off their own citizens. There's also the universal awareness that the 23-year old isn't exactly a shimmering beacons of talent, class and grace (at least not any more) you want hanging around your country indefinitely. In any language, "La Lohan" is synonymous with "pitiful trainwreck."

But! If France gave Lohan some sort of amnesty -- or even a dual citizenship -- we might conceivably have a situation where America and France have something that the other wants. Sure, Roman Polanski for Lindsay Lohan may not look like a fair trade on paper. But what kind of statement would it send if the Los Angeles D.A. left an actual American fugitive to live conditionally free in Paris while attempting to extradite a 76-year-old French citizen who'll probably get off anyway? Who really needs the "lesson" here? By all appearances, Lindsay Lohan is a party girl who thinks she can get away with driving drunk and standing up judges. Roman Polanski is a child rapist who did jail time and whose own victim wants him left alone. (And yes, who also thinks he can get away with standing up judges.)

Anyway, you can see why I never went into international diplomacy. Still, if France really wants its fugitive son back sooner than later, I can think of lesser reasons to roll out a lonnnng welcome mat for its new guest.

· Judge Issues Warrant for Lindsay Lohan's Arrest [PopEater]



Comments

  • David says:

    So if I kill someone in France I should be able to be tried in the U.S. What sick kind of a justice system do you have over there? The country where the crime is committed has the right and duty to prosecute the person who committed the act on their soil. That is a fact around the world. If the kind of justice you are arguing for existed then everyone would just go to another country to rape, steal, and murder.
    Once Roman Polanski entered into a plea of guilty his trial was over. He had the right to a trial if he chose so but he took the path of a plea bargain. France has no jurisdiction over this crime because it was not committed in France and therefore criminal charges do not need to be filed in France.
    Also, when evidence of a crime has been found, in cases of this nature, the state is the one who takes out criminal charges to court and not the victim. This is due to the likelihood of the use of bribes and physical or verbal threats used against the victim to deter them from filing charges. The state is not as susceptible to intimidation
    In your narrow viewpoint it's like saying you can't take a person to court for murder because the deceased won't file the charges!!! How stupid can you be!!!!

  • David says:

    Maybe he should voluntarily return to fulfill his sentence and save France, Switzerland, and the U.S. taxpayer dollars in trying to fight this case. Polanski is not worth the fight to the French people. Believe me, if he was willing to commit such and act of pedophelic rape in the U.S. then there's probably a few over in France that could share the same story. But the way the French government seems to be protecting this monster I doubt some poor little French girl would ever come forward with charges against him. He is a detriment to society everyday that he has been allowed to walk free.