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Kilpatrick described how, after joining his family in an affluent Dallas suburb, he lavished them with gifts "trying to make everything perfect." The problem was that the money spent on plastic surgery for his wife, presents and high living should have been used to help pay what he owed Detroit. "I want to go home, your honor, where I belong," Kilpatrick told Groner. Assistant Prosecutor Athina Siringas said the former mayor's plea for mercy was "vintage Kwame Kilpatrick. The reality of the situation is totally different. He accepts no responsibility for his own behavior." Kilpatrick's attorney, Michael Alan Schwartz, said he was "deeply disappointed" by the sentence. Schwartz has 42 days to appeal. "Some people feel he should have outside contrition. I guess the best thing to do is to come out in sackcloth and ashes," said Schwartz, defending Kilpatrick's desire for extravagance. "He didn't go out and live in a certain lifestyle. Is that what he's being put into prison for? Because he didn't do all those things?" Schwartz said he would request an emergency stay from the Michigan Court of Appeals to free Kilpatrick pending a decision by the court. The lawyer told WWJ-AM Wednesday that the appeal would be partly based on Groner's statement that he treated Kilpatrick in a different manner to how he dealt with other defendants. Groner found Kilpatrick guilty of violating his probation last month after prosecutors revealed he had funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars into his wife's bank accounts and failed to disclose $240,000 in loans from Compuware Chair Peter Karmanos and other prominent businessmen. About $140,000 has been paid toward restitution since Kilpatrick's 2009 release from jail, with $3,000 each month coming from his $120,000 annual salesman salary at Covisint in Dallas. But Covisint's Detroit-based parent company, Compuware Corp., said Tuesday that it was firing Kilpatrick and he will be off the payroll by the end of the month.
[Associated
Press;
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