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Pete Doherty, the rock star who has fought a public battle with drug addiction, walked free from prison today after serving just 29 days of a 14-week sentence for breaching his probation.
He left Wormwood Scrubs Prison in West London at around 7.10am this morning. Dressed in a suit and tie, he told reporters he was pleased to be out and was looking forward to having a rum and coke and spending some time with his pet cats.
Doherty was engulfed by a media scrum as he left the imposing Victorian prison. Smoking a cigarette, the tousled-haired singer had to borrow a reporter’s phone to call for somebody to come and pick him up.
His release caused such a stir with passing motorists that a bus and lorry shunted into each other outside the prison causing a long traffic jam.
Doherty described prison life as “a lot of gangsters and Radio 4” and showed reporters a certificate confirming that he had passed a drugs test while inside. He said he had kept a journal while inside and showed off doodles and sketches he had penned in his cell.
Asked if he had taken any drugs whilst inside the prison, he replied: “Well, I knew it was going to be a bit rough to start with, repeated with the overcrowding and the medical facilities although they do their best - they are good, they can’t really cater for the average junkie...”
Doherty used his release to tell the media that one of the people he had met inside prison was innocent and had been jailed for a crime that someone else had confessed to.
He said he would now be returning to Marlborough in Wiltshire, where he was looking forward to seeing his pet cats. He was then pursued by the press down the main road outside the prison before being finally picked up in a friend’s car.
His release today comes despite claims Doherty took heroin behind bars and while taking the heroin substitute methadone. The Babyshambles singer was jailed last month by district judge Davinder Lachhar at West London magistrates' court.
The decision came after Doherty was handed a four-month suspended jail sentence in October for possessing crack cocaine, heroin, ketamine and cannabis. The judge said the singer was often late or missed probation appointments altogether and had used different drugs.
Doherty had been serving his sentence in segregation after claims that other prisoners had plotted to attack him.
Mobile phone photographs of Doherty sitting in his cell and talking to other inmates on a landing were published in The Sun.
The newspaper claimed that despite being given the heroin substitute methadone Doherty was also taking the real thing.
In September 2003 Doherty was given a six-month jail sentence after admitting burgling the home of his former Libertines band mate Carl Barat. His release means Doherty is free to play on the Park stage at the Glastonbury Festival in Somerset later next month.
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I'm sure his mother was compensated by the royalties she got from the book....
Anthony , BRISTOL, ENGLAND
So the message is:
1. Drugs are glamorous
2. Prisoners can expect to serve only 30% of their sentence?
Luke, London, UK
to J Natrass of York, Have you read the book his mother wrote about him, she has tried to help him, he has got to do it if he wants, what he has put his mum through is a disgrace, and he should be ashamed of himself, he does not deserve any help, there are a lot more worthy causes, he has the money
elisabeth, bolton,
Peter is probably one of the defining singer/songwriters of my generation. The liobertines, Babyshambles and Dirty Pretty Things have had a profound influence in my life. Peter shoulkd not be vilified as a junkie, but helped. Or the press should focus on his musical skills.
J.J. Nattrass, York,
Vilifying him quite so savagely for merely saying that he quite fancied a rum and coke after a month in prison is somewhat disproportionate. Should we start penalising people for thoughtcrime now while we're at it?
Javid, Greenwich,
Although the actions of others are entirely their own decision and if they want to destroy themselves its up to them, but surely the media and the court systems should not put these people on a pedestal?
Is there anyone within the media or court system that stops to think that this is a bad idea?
Mel, Caernarfon, Wales
I'd wonder why this piece of non news is being given bandwidth. Why should we care about some junky coming out earlier from prison than he ought to be purely because he's got a few extra pounds in the bank.
T. Hamilton, Chatham,
What a sorry waste of Human tissue.. its about time the media did leave him alone, he could then end is days without such articles massaging his already massive ego. Enjoy your Rum and coke!
Declan, Preston,
14 weeks = 29 days?
Was he only in for weekends or something, and we wonder why there are so many criminals laughing at the prisons and justice system.
Paul, Andover,
Released due to rehabilitation.
Drug free and clean.
AND the first thing he wants is a rum and coke.
Isn't the current expert opinion that to stay drug free one has to stay alcohol free?
Score - Addicts 1 HMP 0
J D Skrine, Cardiff, UK
John F, I was unaware that Doherty's prison sentence was for the illicit consumption of rum and cokes.
Javid, Greenwich,
John F - I thought Pete Doherty was in prison for hard drug offences, not Rum and Coke abuse. He has done a lot of stupid things and doesn't deserve to be released from prison so early, but I hardly think you can condemn the man for wanting a Rum and Coke
Nick, London, England
"...he told reporters he was pleased to be out and was looking forward to having a rum and coke..."
Well I can see he's learned a lot from his time behind bars, then.
John F, London,
he looks loads healthier than he did before he went in- prison is obviously good for him....!
A Johnson, London, UK
I'd very much like to know whether this short, almost negligible sentence is standard for anyone who has committed the vast number of drugs offences of which Doherty has been convicted or whether he is being offered preferential treatment.
Mikey, Bromley, Kent