Seemingly having a difficult time as the days add up, Lindsay Lohan was reportedly put into isolation at the Lynwood Correctional Facility after having a hysterical fit on Friday (July 23).
An inmate who was released from the jail where the “Mean Girls” actress is currently serving her sentence claims, “Lindsay would lie there shivering all night, crying and trying to cover her face with her hands. Her wailing was keeping everyone awake.”
The inmate continued, “Lindsay got put on lockdown. She had a hysterical fit, crying and yelling so she got put in isolation.”
In related news, it sounds like Miss Lohan may be getting out even sooner than previously expected, as an insider told Radar Online, “Lindsay’s team is doing everything they can to get her out of jail this weekend.”
It’s no secret that she was dreading her jail time, and now Lindsay Lohan is struggling to even get something to drink.
The “Mean Girls” actress won’t have access to bottled water until Monday (when the commissary orders are taken) and she can’t bear to drink water from the sink in her cell.
LiLo reportedly begged several jailers for water, with one of them telling her, “Just drink the milk from the day before.”
And while she’s having a rough go if it now, an inside source says Lindsay will be making some serious loot when she gets out of the slammer.
The source reveals that Miss Lohan has already set up a million-dollar interview to talk about this whole mess once she’s free.
Judge Marsha Revel just sentenced Lindsay Lohan to 90 days in jail beginning July 20, as the 24-year-old actress was found to be in violation of probation stemming from her back to back DUI arrests in 2007. After missing seven alcohol education classes at Right On Programs in Glendale, California, Judge Revel announced the harsh sentence as Lindsay broke down in the Beverly Hills Courthouse.
In addition to three months in county jail, Lindsay must go to inpatient treatment for 90 days immediately after her sentence is up, and her probation has been extended as well. Lindsay’s SCRAM bracelet must stay on until she turns herself in on July 20, and as expected, Lindsay is forbidden from drinking alcohol or getting behind the wheel of a motor vehicle.
When Cheryl Marshall, co-owner of Right On Programs was cross-examined earlier in the day, she testified that Lindsay had missed nine classes, but after going back over pages and pages of records, it was determined that Lindsay had missed a total of 7 of the 27 weekly classes she was supposed to attend. Lindsay’s attorney Shawn Chapman Holley tried to argue that Lindsay was on track to finish the program by July 15, but Judge Revel wouldn’t accept the answer, telling the court, “Nowhere did I say substantial compliance would be good enough.” Though Lindsay attempted to make up for the classes, she disobeyed the judge’s direct order to attend them on a weekly basis, and she provided a variety of excuses and took leaves of absence which were not allowed by the court.
Revel was also very critical of the reports Right On Programs submitted to Lindsay’s progress hearings over the past 6 months, as they were found to be not entirely accurate. Revel specifically cited one report on Feb 16, 2010 which stated Lindsay was in compliance, but failed to note that she had missed dates on January 7, 13 and February 14, 2010. It seems as though the program’s apparent lack of concern for the court order (not to mention their shoddy record keeping — the prosecutor pointed out numerous clerical errors and Marshall even admitted her company’s records were “confusing”) combined with Lindsay’s lack of respect for the court were what made up Revel’s mind.
Lindsay begged the judge to have mercy on her, tearfully explaining that she thought she was in compliance with the terms of her probation. “I did everything that I was told to do. I did the best I could to balance my jobs and showing up,” Lindsay told Judge Revel. “I’m not taking this as a joke. It’s my life … I don’t want you to think that I don’t respect you, I mean that with all my heart.”