By COREY WILLIAMS Associated Press Writer
Kwame Kilpatrick regained his freedom early Tuesday morning, emerging from jail after a 99-day sentence and stepping back onto the streets of the city he once ruled as mayor.
The 38-year-old Kilpatrick, about 25 pounds lighter than when he entered jail at the end of October, left the downtown Detroit facility wearing a dark suit just after 12:30 a.m. On the sidewalk, Kilpatrick stood for a long moment amid bright television camera lights, a crush of awaiting reporters and swirling snowflakes, smiling occasionally to those in the crowd who called his name and shouted: "We love you, Kwame! Detroit loves you, baby!"
Kilpatrick was rushed to a waiting blue Chevrolet Suburban, as the Democrat waved from behind tinted windows as he was whisked away as part of a multi-vehicle caravan. Kilpatrick made no statements to the media during his release, upon the orders of new defense attorney Willie E. Gary, according to the AP. "He's not bitter. He said he learned a lot," Gary said during an impromptu sidewalk news conference.
"He said this has been an experience he'll never forget, and he thinks because of it he'll be a better person." It's been more than a year since a text-messaging sex scandal started the long process that ended in Kilpatrick's arrest, plea, jailing and release.
Now, the man who quickly rose from a state representative to mayor of a city of 900,000 people simply is looking for work. Kilpatrick was expected to meet with state probation officials before heading to a job interview Wednesday with an unnamed company at an undisclosed location in Texas. His wife, Carlita, and three young sons, already have left Michigan.
A judge has ordered that he return by Feb. 9. "The job prospect is very, very, very favorable," Gary told reporters. "We want to make sure he can get, and land, the job. That's his first thing. He wants a job. That's what he is concerned about now.
He wants to get with his family, get with his kids so he can start his life again." The next five years, though, will be spent on probation and paying off the bulk of $1 million in restitution to the city. He also has had his law license revoked. If Kilpatrick lands the job in Texas, he must first get permission to transfer his probation from Michigan to that state, as reported.
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