A Mostly Peaceful Carjacking/Murder By A 13/15 Year Old Girls

rickyb

Well-Known Member
Counterpoint: Jurors are spiteful idiots and jury trials are bad for everyone. That's why 99% of cases never go to trial.
no its because the system is underfunded like everything is.

why is tuition so high? because govt under funded it

why is infrastructure so bad? because govt under funded it

this kind of economics called neoliberalism has been going on for 40 years now.
 

Non sequitur

Well-Known Member
Today for 50 billion people on the planet is palm Sunday. Even those crossing the rio grande today understand. Our Lord Jesus Christ had his disciples bring him a colt and an ass. And he symbolically sat on the colt, ( which no man had ridden on), ie; the gentile race or non-jewish, and traveled into Jerusalem with the residents honoring him praising him as their King.

You sir need to check yourself because tolorence is only a mercy.
 

Non sequitur

Well-Known Member
I really could care less what color they are, it's the irrational indifference that cold blooded countrymen have.
They are the problem and they offer no solutions. Cancel them now
 

rickyb

Well-Known Member

the truth can hurt

"The reality is that almost no one who is imprisoned in America has gotten a trial. There is rarely an impartial investigation. A staggering 97 percent of all federal cases and 95 percent of all state felony cases are resolved through plea bargaining. Of the 2.2 million people we have incarcerated at the moment—25 percent of the world’s prison population—2 million never had a trial. And significant percentages of them are innocent. Judge Jed S. Rakoff in an article in The New York Review of Books titled “Why Innocent People Plead Guilty” explains how this secretive plea system works to thwart justice. Close to 40 percent of those eventually exonerated of their crimes originally pleaded guilty, usually in an effort to reduce charges that would have resulted in much longer prison sentences if the cases had gone to trial. The students I teach in prison who have the longest sentences are usually the ones who demanded a trial. Many of them went to trial because they did not commit the crime. But if you go to trial you cannot bargain away any of the charges against you in exchange for a shorter sentence. The public defender—who spends no more than a few minutes reviewing the case and has neither the time nor the inclination to do the work required by a trial—uses the prospect of the harshest sentence possible to frighten the client into taking a plea deal. And, as depicted in “Making a Murderer,” prosecutors and defense attorneys often work as a tag team to force the accused to plead guilty. If all of the accused went to trial, the judicial system, which is designed around plea agreements, would collapse. And this is why trial sentences are horrific. It is why public attorneys routinely urge their clients to accept a plea arrangement. Trials are a flashing red light to the accused: DO NOT DO THIS. It is the inversion of justice.

...the Guardian newspaper reported: “The Innocence Project has kept detailed records on the 337 cases across the [United States] where prisoners have been exonerated as a result of DNA testing since 1989. The group’s researchers found that false confessions were made in 28 percent of all the DNA-related exonerations, a striking proportion in itself. But when you look only at homicide convictions—by definition the most serious cases—false confessions are the leading cause of miscarriages of justice, accounting for a full 63% of the 113 exonerations.”"
 

Wally

BrownCafe Innovator & King of Puns
They tasered the man. Premeditated, Death penalty will be the sentence. It will be commuted to 10 years with 2 and 5 being in juvenile detention. Move on, no big deal.
You mean people intent on doing evil can get weapons? If so, how will taking guns away from law abiding citizens help stop crime?
 

DriveInDriѵeOut

Inordinately Right
Don't worry guys, these things happen, it was just an accident.

Screenshot_20210328-163501_Chrome.jpg
 

Wally

BrownCafe Innovator & King of Puns

the truth can hurt

"The reality is that almost no one who is imprisoned in America has gotten a trial. There is rarely an impartial investigation. A staggering 97 percent of all federal cases and 95 percent of all state felony cases are resolved through plea bargaining. Of the 2.2 million people we have incarcerated at the moment—25 percent of the world’s prison population—2 million never had a trial. And significant percentages of them are innocent. Judge Jed S. Rakoff in an article in The New York Review of Books titled “Why Innocent People Plead Guilty” explains how this secretive plea system works to thwart justice. Close to 40 percent of those eventually exonerated of their crimes originally pleaded guilty, usually in an effort to reduce charges that would have resulted in much longer prison sentences if the cases had gone to trial. The students I teach in prison who have the longest sentences are usually the ones who demanded a trial. Many of them went to trial because they did not commit the crime. But if you go to trial you cannot bargain away any of the charges against you in exchange for a shorter sentence. The public defender—who spends no more than a few minutes reviewing the case and has neither the time nor the inclination to do the work required by a trial—uses the prospect of the harshest sentence possible to frighten the client into taking a plea deal. And, as depicted in “Making a Murderer,” prosecutors and defense attorneys often work as a tag team to force the accused to plead guilty. If all of the accused went to trial, the judicial system, which is designed around plea agreements, would collapse. And this is why trial sentences are horrific. It is why public attorneys routinely urge their clients to accept a plea arrangement. Trials are a flashing red light to the accused: DO NOT DO THIS. It is the inversion of justice.

...the Guardian newspaper reported: “The Innocence Project has kept detailed records on the 337 cases across the [United States] where prisoners have been exonerated as a result of DNA testing since 1989. The group’s researchers found that false confessions were made in 28 percent of all the DNA-related exonerations, a striking proportion in itself. But when you look only at homicide convictions—by definition the most serious cases—false confessions are the leading cause of miscarriages of justice, accounting for a full 63% of the 113 exonerations.”"
More in jail = safer communities.
 

SLW

Well-Known Member
More in jail = safer communities.
Con college and felon networking event. That criminal record and those fines and court costs makes it pretty hard to work or drive or live anywhere, unless you decide to just keep doing crimes. Or you come work for UPS.
 

rickyb

Well-Known Member
More in jail = safer communities.
its not a good look when you have more ppl in jail per capita than china or russia, and way more htan more civilized EU countries.

ur jail numbers are similar to your corona numbers. you should have 5% of pop in jail and with corona because thats your population relative to teh world, but you have 25% of world jail population
 

Non sequitur

Well-Known Member
Media, nothing to see hear folks. This is truly colorless but law abiding, God fearing Americans should burn it down until the real innocent get their Justice.
 
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