A young man in Texas first bowed to "rich" to avoid imprisonment in a fatal drunk driving case and was released from prison two years later.
20-year-old Ethan Couch launched a headline in 2013 who thought that the lawyer accused himself "rich" and thought that his customers were spoiled for judging good and evil because their customers were too wealthy.
He was initially suspended, avoiding the prison. He was imprisoned after breaking the verdict.
Attorneys Scott Brown and Reagan Wynn said they will supervise the community for six years after Monday's release.
"From the beginning, Ethan recognized my behavior, was responsible for my actions, and I was very sorry about the terrible outcome of these actions," said his legal team in a statement.
"Now, after the terrible incident nearly five years ago, Ethan wanted to pay attention to himself, did not want to demand privacy, so he completed the surveillance of the community successfully and proceeded as a law-abiding citizen I might concentrate. "
In 2013, the Juvenile Court sentenced a suspended sentence for 10 years from June 15, 2013 to 16, and four people died.
Medical test concluded that when he struck a truck to the SUV that was stranded beside the road, the couch was drunk and the prescription was high with marijuana.
Four people died in Burleson's country road in Texas, nine people were injured - 45 miles southwest of Dallas (70 km)
During his trial, psychologists claimed that teenagers suffer from "wealth".
By the judge's decision, he avoided imprisonment and caused anger between the victim's family and the drunk driving prevention group.
Shoot alcohol at Couch's 2015 party - a violation of his probation clause - he and his mother fled to Mexico
They were found in resort town Puerto Vallarta and returned to the US where the boy was sentenced to 720 days in prison.
His mother, Tonya Couch, was accused of blocking concerns about known repetitive crime and money laundering but was released after issuing bonds.
Mother to drunk driving (Madd) published a statement before Couch was released, it was "small comfort" and had to serve for six years yet.
"The victims who were sentenced to life imprisonment for their drunk driving decisions and their families were sentenced to two years in prison terms, of which four were seriously illegal," Madd said.
As part of the couch-protection observation clause he will be required to wear a GPS-enabled tracker to monitor if he is prohibited from using alcohol forbidden.
First of all, Ethan Couch, an 18-year-old Texas brother, issued four dead in the accident of drunk driving. As his lawyer started defensive 'Affluenza' defense, the couch was released on parole. According to Couch's lawyer, Affluenza is Crayon Clea's brain disease caused by the wealthy helicopter's mother. In terms of professional diagnosis, Affluenza is as true as shopping and sunburn. Legally speaking, the lack of empathy was not enough to rule out legal liability. The defendant must be ill or incompetent. Without an empathy to prevent someone being guilty, we will not be able to imprison the white-collar criminal police or racist police in history ... Oh, that's okay.
The word "rich" is very popular. Recently, it was related to Ethan Couch, a Texas teenager who killed four people in a car accident in 2013 when he was drunk. During the trial, the defense witness asserted that the couch should not be held responsible for his destructive behavior. His parents gave him so much money and praised him as completely self-centered, in other words he was a victim of wealth, overwhelmed by the sense of rights, and can not tell right from wrong I made it. In fact, despite the deaths of four innocent people, his judge only sentenced him to imprisonment, not a prison sentence.
In 2013, a drunk driving accident in Tesan killed four people by wealthy teens called Ethan Couch. Couch 's defense team explained that customers suffer from "wealth" and that psychologist G. Dick Miller confirmed this claim. Based on his economic privilege that prevented him from understanding the logic of his behavior, the couch was eventually sentenced to rehabilitation and probation rather than prison. The public was shocked, Miller regretted that he introduced a suspicious new word in popular culture.