Eminem's ex-wife, Kimberly Mathers, has pleaded guilty to a drug charge and a driving offense as part of an agreement to resolve two drug cases.
She appeared in a courtroom Thursday to entered a guilty plea for a charge of possesions of cocaine and failing to give adequate space to an emergency vehicle.
The two charges stem from a June traffic stop in St. Clair Shores. For pleading guilty to the charges, another charge of driving with a suspended license will be dropped and a charge of maintaining a drug house from a hotel party in Warren in September where police confiscated marijuana and Ecstasy, will be dismissed, said David Portuesi, chief of the drug crimes unit for the Macomb County prosecutor's office.
"Probation is an outcome that's recommended here within the state guidelines," Portuesi told The Macomb Daily for Friday's editions.
While her first charge was pending, Mathers failed to appear in court the first time and later she removed an electronic monitoring device order by the court for Mathers to wear.
Mathers attorney, Michael Sinutko asked for Mathers to get consideration under a legal provision where offenders convicted of their first drug crime can abide by probation or other terms and get their convictions sealed or expunged. Servitto likely will rule on the request at Mathers' Jan. 21 sentencing.
Source: ballerstatus.com
She appeared in a courtroom Thursday to entered a guilty plea for a charge of possesions of cocaine and failing to give adequate space to an emergency vehicle.
The two charges stem from a June traffic stop in St. Clair Shores. For pleading guilty to the charges, another charge of driving with a suspended license will be dropped and a charge of maintaining a drug house from a hotel party in Warren in September where police confiscated marijuana and Ecstasy, will be dismissed, said David Portuesi, chief of the drug crimes unit for the Macomb County prosecutor's office.
"Probation is an outcome that's recommended here within the state guidelines," Portuesi told The Macomb Daily for Friday's editions.
While her first charge was pending, Mathers failed to appear in court the first time and later she removed an electronic monitoring device order by the court for Mathers to wear.
Mathers attorney, Michael Sinutko asked for Mathers to get consideration under a legal provision where offenders convicted of their first drug crime can abide by probation or other terms and get their convictions sealed or expunged. Servitto likely will rule on the request at Mathers' Jan. 21 sentencing.
Source: ballerstatus.com