$32.72. College athletes aren’t paid, at least not yet, but surely Jameis Winston could’ve afforded $32.72 worth of crab legs and crawfish?

Winston, the Heisman Trophy winner and Florida State University quarterback, ran into more legal trouble Tuesday night, when he reportedly shoplifted a little more than $32 worth of food from a local supermarket, reports USA Today. Store employees contacted law enforcement who met Winston at his residence; the quarterback claimed that he “forgot” to pay, but admitted to taking the food.

For many, petty theft would lead to an arrest, but luckily for Winston, he was given a civil citation as part of a diversion program. What does that mean for Winston?

In recent years, diversion programs have increased in popularity, in part because of jail overcrowding, and in part because of an increased feeling that not all crimes are serious enough to warrant a criminal record. Often, the diversion program will happen formally, through the prosecutor and the court. But in Tallahassee, Florida, local law enforcement agencies have recently adopted a pre-arrest civil citation system.

Instead of an arrest, charges, and a deal with prosecutors, officers have the discretion to give a civil citation (akin to a ticket) to an offender, who is then required to complete a minimal amount of community service. For Winston, it’ll be 20 hours.

Winston may walk away from this shoplifting incident with only a slap on the wrist, but the consequences could go far beyond a ticket or community service.

This is true, even though the sum total of all of his alleged misdeeds is a single citation. (Winston has also been suspended indefinitely from Florida State’s baseball team, where he was a preseason All-American, reports ESPN.)

Extra-legal consequences are also a reality for those of us who aren’t destined for NFL greatness. A revoked or suspended driver’s license from a DUI or a criminal record that hasn’t been expunged (removed from one’s record by court order) could give employers pause, even if the offense is minor and carried little to no criminal penalties.

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Related Resources:

  • FSU’s Heisman QB, Jameis Winston, busted for shoplifting Publix crab legs, crawfish (Miami Herald)
  • Jameis Winston Won’t Be Charged, but Can He Be Sued? (FindLaw’s Tarnished Twenty)
  • FSU Recruit Cinmeon Bowers Arrested for Eating Marijuana (FindLaw’s Tarnished Twenty)
  • Clippers Controversy: Legal to Record Donald Sterling’s Comments? (FindLaw’s Tarnished Twenty)

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