Alison Ernst, the woman from Phoenix who threw her soccer shoe at former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on April 10 is set to be released today from police custody.
A Las Vegas federal judge has dismissed the misdemeanor violence charge against Emst on Tuesday, reported CBS 5 AZ.
U.S. District Magistrate Judge George Foley Jr. gave in to the request of prosecutors to dismiss the violence charge against Emst.
After her shoe-throwing assault on Mrs. Clinton, Emst eventually pleaded guilty to trespassing count, cited the CBS 5 AZ report.
The federal judge said he wants Emst freed pending her sentencing on the misdemeanour trespassing count.
The former U.S. First Lady was in the middle of a speech in Mandalay Bay resort in Las Vegas when the shoe-throwing incident took place.
Ernst missed Clinton. She has been in detention since after the incident. The Phoenix woman could face six months in prison for her crime. October 10 marked the sixth month of her detention.
There's No Stopping Her
People can throw everything to Hillary Clinton, including a shoe, but it seems that there's no stopping the former U.S. Secretary of State from eyeing the presidency come 2016.
The New York Times alluded that Hillary may in fact announce her presidential bid rather early after the mid-term elections next month.
"If the Democrats lose control of the Senate in the midterm elections, the party may need to quickly pivot to the presidential campaign. The Democratic Party would look to Mrs. Clinton as its 'Noah's Ark,' a vessel on which voters and donors could channel their enthusiasm and funding support," people close to the former U.S. Secretary States told the New York Times.
Bustle confirmed the possible change of plans from what Hillary Clinton has publicly suggested months earlier.
"Heavy Democratic losses in the upcoming November elections could hasten her plans to enter the race and kick off the long, long president season," noted Bustle.
A Republic-controlled Congress in waiting could imperil President Obama's (and the Democratic Party's) late-term agenda in advance of the 2016 general election, further observes Bustle.
Hillary needs to start her possible 2016 presidential campaign early since she needs to launch an exploratory committee to begin fundraising.
After all, every American politician worth his salt knows that one can never have enough funding for a presidential campaign; especially if she is coming from a party possibly reeling from a drubbing in the hands of the Republicans.
Check out how Hillary dodge the soccer shoe in April: