answer:Well… technically, he pleaded guilty to and was convicted for “one count of illegally structuring $950,000 in bank withdrawals to avoid reporting requirements. He admitted in a plea agreement with prosecutors he was making the withdrawals to pay a longtime acquaintance — identified in court records only as Individual A — to hide wrongdoing from his past.” The statute of limitations had run out on the child molestation charges, which as far as I know are fairly recent. (And which are, of course, the “wrongdoing from his past” that he was attempting to cover up.) But to answer your question more directly, justice is almost never served in our courts, and if it is, then it’s just a coincidence. Since it seems more likely than not – if his current appearance is any indicator of his actual health – that he will die in prison before the sentence is completed, perhaps that will be a measure of justice for those who believe that punishment is ever appropriate justice.