Upon returning to my studio apartment after three days in jail, I
received a letter from UC Berkeley informing me in no uncertain terms
that I'd been expelled. Apparently schools do that sort of thing when
you don't bother showing up to classes and your grade point average
starts with a decimal point. In that moment, I realized I had two basic
options for how to deal with my situation: grow up or give up.
During the next few months while waiting for my court date, I
was in a total funk. Most days I slept until well past noon. I buried myself in video games, sometimes for 18 hours at a time. (We're talking
single-player Nintendo games here, not massive multiplayer online
games.) It's hard to feel motivated when you're expecting to go to jail
for a while.
Eventually I secured a lawyer and met with him at his office to
discuss my situation. Before I could open my mouth, he blurted out,
"Steve, I've reviewed your case, and since this is your first offense,
I'm pretty sure we can get it reduced to petty theft. If we plead no
contest, you'll get off with a lesser conviction and end up with some
community service. I'm on great terms with the district attorney, so
I'm sure he'll go for it. I strongly advise against going to trial, as the
evidence against you is overwhelming, seeing as you were caught
red-handed."
Immediately my thoughts began to race. First offense? Is he deluded? Why does he think this is my first offense? Doesn't he know about
my priors? If he thinks this is a first offense, will the rest of the court think
so, too? Should I correct him on this serious oversight?
While trying to decide how to respond, I heard a voice in the back
of my mind: Keep your damned mouth shut! I realized that speaking
up now might backfire on me later, but there was a slim chance it
could "frontfire," too. I figured that the worst case was that I'd have
an angry lawyer somewhere down the road, but the best case was too
good to pass up. Grand theft is a felony; petty theft is only a misdemeanor. I decided I had to risk it. Taking risks was an all-too-familiar
pastime