Michael Lohan told RadarOnline.com exclusively that his daughter Lindsay’s well-publicized troubles come from a “broken heart” stemming from his divorce with her mother Dina, which he said she’s been trying to fill with “all the wrong things.
Sources connected with the Lindsay Lohan case tell TMZ … the offer Deputy D.A. Danette Meyers made to Lindsay’s lawyer in chambers was SIX MONTHS in jail.
Judge Keith Schwartz said in open court he had a feeling Shawn Holley would pass on the D.A.’s offer. That’s because Lindsay will not accept jail time — at least not now.
LOS ANGELES — A judge on Wednesday gave Lindsay Lohan roughly two weeks to decide if she will fight or take a plea deal in a felony grand theft case, but either decision could send the troubled starlet back behind bars.
Superior Court Judge Keith Schwartz told Lohan he would sentence her to jail if she accepted a plea deal involving the theft of a $2,500 necklace from an upscale jewelry store.
Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) offered some advice to troubled starlet Lindsay Lohan Tuesday, saying that the actress should seek “guidance from some people that care about her.”
Speaking with “America’s Morning News” on the Talk Radio Network, Brown said he “think[s] about” Lohan “a lot,” and that he would like a chance to tell her “you can do better and be better.”
Brown, father of two daughters around Lohan’s age, also recalled Lohan’s career in the 1998 film “The Parent Trap” and seemed to be disturbed by the rugged path she had taken since then — one that most recently landed her in a court room for allegedly stealing a $2,500 necklace.
“All of the things you read about her, you feel badly,” Brown said. “I would hope that she would start to get some real guidance from some people that care about her and [are] not looking for headlines or purse strings attached.”
In Brown’s book, “Against All Odds,” the senator describes his experience with shoplifting during his teen years, a tumultuous period that was marked with sexual and physical abuse.