Gotta love that U.S. justice system. Perpetrators just aren't given enough time to reoffend!![]()
Yeah, but a tenth of the population is locked up.
I see at least three possible solutions:
1. Lower the burden of proof. This of course increases the risk of wrongful convictions. This is probably more common in difficult-to-prove cases. For example, a judge, aware of how difficult it is to prove sexual assault and the statistical probability of an accused being guilty, subconsciously lowers the burden of proof to get a conviction.
2. Expand the number of possible offences. One example of this is fornication as an offense in some US states. If there is reasonable doubt about a defendant's guilt of sexual assault for example but no doubt about him having knowingly and willingly engaged in a sexual act with the alleged victim, then the judge could fine him for fornication. Though the accused might be innocent of the sexual assault, at least he's being found guilty of something for which we know he is guilty. Even if he is innocent of sexual assault, he still has a responsibility to not sleep with any strange woman who'll falsely accuse him of sexual assault. Let that serve as a lesson for him. This same principle could apply to other legal arras too. For example, making the simple consumption of alcohol other than as prescribed by a physician a fineable offense for when drinking and driving can't be adequately proved. Or make gambling itself a fineable offwnse for when opetating an ilegal gambling den can't be proved. A person can always choose to not sleep around, consume alcohol or gamble; and a judge could rely on these as emotional pressure valves as alternatives to subconsciously lowering the burden of proof.
3. Provide more education for crime investigators so as to improve their evidence collection abilities and so reduce the conviction rate of innocents and increase that of the guilty.
4. Increase the severity of the punishment for those who are proved guilty of a more serious crime beyond a reasonable doubt after it's been ascertained that the judge stricty applied the principle of innocent until proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
#2. sounds like a hell of a good idea UNTIL you look into it deeply.To make it work the population would have to be half cops and the other two quarters lawyers and judges, which doesn't leave any room for prison guards.
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Billy Cummer is a violent career criminal who has spent much of his life in prison. After his latest conviction for armed robbery, he asked to spend the rest of his life behind bars.
We already have that
It's called the Senate
Wow. For trying to abduct and kill two children. What is wrong with this country.........?
A man who pleaded guilty to the attempted abduction of an eight-year-old girl near Stanley Park, the aggravated assault of a five-year-old boy in Surrey and three counts of assault involving correctional officers has been sentenced to 40 months in prison.
Nathaniel David Jessup — who has been in custody since his arrest in September 2015 — appeared in B.C. Supreme court in Vancouver with short brown hair, a goatee and dressed in a red tie-dye T-shirt. He stood up for most of Monday's sentencing hearing.
With time served, Jessup will spend five months in prison.
Justice Paul Pearlman asked Jessup whether he had anything to say to the court, to which he replied: "No."
Crown lawyer Gail Banning began Monday's hearing by recounting the details of the aggravated assault of a five-year-old-child in Surrey.
The court heard how Jessup was friends with a man who lived in a trailer in an alley behind the young boy's home.
The day before the offence, Jessup met the child's parents briefly and had a conversation.
The next day, Jessup went into their yard uninvited while the family had friends over for dinner. The boy's father told Jessup it wasn't a great time to be there, but the five-year-old asked Jessup to come look at the chickens in the family's coop.
Jessup proceeded to pick up the child with both arms, which made the boy's father uncomfortable. He then saw the man who owned the trailer down the alley and went to speak to him about Jessup.
Not long after, he saw Jessup in a squatted position with his child who appeared to be unwell.
"The father observed that [the boy's] body was limp, his head was flopping around on his shoulders. His limbs were hanging loosely," said Banning
The boy later came to and the police were called to the home.
A doctor who testified in a preliminary hearing told the court it was clear the boy had been asphyxiated.
"When all the factors were put together it was difficult to come up with another diagnosis," said Banning.
The doctor said had the choking gone on longer, it could have caused permanent brain damage or death.
In September of 2015, Jessup grabbed an eight-year-old girl in an open-air parking lot near the north end of Denman Street by Stanley Park.
Banning told the court that the young girl was just metres behind her parents.
"[Jessup] grabbed her by the neck by holding his arm over her throat. He lifted her feet from the ground. She was able to breath but unable to speak," said Banning.
The girl was uninjured and her father eventually chased Jessup away.
Days later, Jessup grabbed a two-year-old girl while she was with her family near Lost Lagoon in Stanley Park. When the girl's father confronted the man, he released her and ran off.
Man who choked 5-year-old boy and tried to abduct 8-year-old girl sentenced to 40 months - British Columbia - CBC News
He's been in for abduction attempts before, just two years ago.
Global News Link
An Alberta man who admitted to punching and stomping his father to death and attacking his sister on the Trans-Canada Highway after a night of heavy drinking has been sentenced to 3½ years in prison.
Tristan Wesley, a 29-year-old Morley resident, was sentenced Thursday after pleading guilty to manslaughter in the July 2015 killing of Myles McLean.
The Morley resident, who had originally been charged with second-degree murder, also pleaded guilty to assault causing bodily harm in relation to the attack on his sister.
The court heard that the accused and his 55-year-old father had been drinking at a casino and were being driven home by the sister when the men got into an argument and Wesley started hitting his dad.
Alberta man sentenced to 3½ years for beating his father to death on side of Trans-Canada Highway - Calgary - CBC News
Oh and you have the ones that are sentenced to 2 life terms without parole plus 400 years - sentences to be served consecutively.
The Crown had sought a prison term of five to seven years, while the defence argued for either a suspended sentence with probation, or a jail term of up to two years.