Offering a chilling reminder to the world that the first rule of Twitter is to never tweet, federal prosecutors on Wednesday rejected conservative filmmaker and campaign finance fraudster Dinesh D'Souza's plea for a reduced sentence, and pointed to his recent behavior online — particularly his insinuations that his prosecution is politically motivated — as evidence that his claim to be "ashamed and contrite" was insincere.

D'Souza, long a favorite pundit of the far-right, was indicted earlier this year for campaign finance fraud and has already pleaded guilty to using "straw donors" to funnel money to 2012 GOP Senate candidate Kelly Long. According to a report from Reuters, D'Souza professed contrition over his actions, and asked prosecutors to punish him by placing him on probation and mandating he agree to community service. The government is seeking a federal prison sentence of 10-16 months, and declined D'Souza's request.

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To defend their choice, federal officials noted that D'Souza turned himself in at "the last possible moment" before trial, and since the indictment has repeatedly claimed during appearances on TV and through the Internet that he is a political target and had little choice but to offer a guilty plea. "Based on the defendant's own post-plea statements," prosecutors' filing reads, "the court should reject the defendant's claims of contrition on the eve of sentencing."

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