Crime and Punishment - for Paris it obviously will include punishment that far exceeds the crime. When violaters who commit same violations as Paris get treated the same as she, only then can you say she is getting same treatment as everyone else. As it stands now, she is being treated far more harshly and obviously it is because this judge wants to punish punish punish her for her celebrity, for her attitude, for being miss rich young thing - he is committed to taking her down several notches as a publicity stunt for these reasons - not for her actual violations. So what Paris should do is after this experience be far more protective of herself and make sure that no one ever has this kind of control over her again.
The public who so enjoys vilifying her really ought to examine the source of their internal rage that they feel so free to express publicly. People want Paris to "rot" in jail, to serve 45 years, these expressions of hate say more about those expressing them than anything about Paris.
What would you have done if the sheriff offered you release as he did to Paris? Would you have turned it down? Of course not. And the judge's anger at what the sheriff did - he is not really angry at sheriff, he is so mad that his control over Paris was taken away and that is what he wanted to get back. This is such a sick display of male posturing.
What is so ironic is that all this guarantees Paris's media exposure will be front and center for years to come. All those who vilify her will still watch her every move for years to come and you all are hooked - you cannot give her up! The little tarnish to her image will disappear in a few months, television and magazines and ghost writers will all by queuing up to sign her and get a contract to work with her, and the adoring and spiteful public will continue to be hooked on Paris.

justice