Lindsay Lohan to wear SCRAM bracelet after jail release
Saturday, September 25, 2010, 13:03 [IST]
Washington (ANI): Lindsay Lohan, who is expected to be released from jail soon following bail, will have to get a SCRAM bracelet within 24 hours. And under the terms of her bail, she is not allowed to be around known drug users and must submit to search by law enforcement at any time, reports TMZ.
Also, nightclubs will be a major no-no. The actress has to stay out of places where alcohol is the "chief item of sale." Lohan will be a free woman soon, because a judge has just reversed Judge Elden Fox''s decision and has granted her bail. Lindsay may soon be a free woman after a judge agreed with her lawyer that the star is entitled to bail.
A Los Angeles judge, on Friday afternoon, overturned a ruling to deny the actress bail after Lohan was ordered into custody at a Lynwood, Calif., jail. "An order has been signed by Judge Patricia Schnegg granting writ of habeas corpus," People mag quoted court spokesman Allan Parachini as saying. "Bail has been set at 300,000 dollars, " Parachini added.
Habeas corpus refers to the release of an inmate due to unlawful detention. However, Judge Schnegg ruled that Lohan must be fitted with a SCRAM alcohol-monitoring device within 24 hours if she posts bail. She faces a probation violation hearing on Oct. 22.
Lindsay Lohan may soon be a free woman after a judge agreed with her lawyer that the star is entitled to bail. A Los Angeles judge, on Friday afternoon, overturned a ruling to deny the actress bail after Lohan was ordered into custody at a Lynwood, Calif., jail.
"An order has been signed by Judge Patricia Schnegg granting writ of habeas corpus," People mag quoted court spokesman Allan Parachini as saying. "Bail has been set at 300,000 dollars, " Parachini added. Habeas corpus refers to the release of an inmate due to unlawful detention.
However, Judge Schnegg ruled that Lohan must be fitted with a SCRAM alcohol-monitoring device within 24 hours if she posts bail. She faces a probation violation hearing on Oct. 22.
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