captloadie said:
Don't we hand out sentences to criminals to punish them, not alleviate the grief of the family? If a habitual drunk driver kills someone, but the family forgives him, should we let him go free? No, we punish him.
The problem is that the entire prison system is based on rehabilitation. Punishment is a severely minor element to being in jail. Look at how hard and how much money is spent on making prisoners comfortable and happy.
Nostix said:
Again, back to the issue. We know it is a "slam dunk", but why? What set of legal guidelines can you put in place which can be followed in a future case?
Some of these most heinous cases have heaps of solid evidence. Such as the degenerates video taping themselves. As for legal guidelines, that would be as always up to a judge to decide.
Nostix said:
We can't exactly have a person's life sitting in the court of public opinion. That's fundamentally opposed to the purpose of the justice system.
Per se, it is only a legal system. Justice took a big ole walk around, oh... 1982. As for public opinion, we have more than enough examples that the judges have little or no regard for the publics opinion. "Disdain" is the word that comes to mind for me. There are a few decent exceptions, but judge-shopping for defense lawyers is pretty standard.
HavokFour said:
Hang 'em high.
In my eyes, the perfect system would include...
Harsher penalties would be nice, but in reality the cost to house all those people would be stunning and unmanageable. I'm all for the death suggestions you mentioned though. FYI- "Rape" no longer exists in law, it's called sexual assault.
Brutus said:
I agree. If we argue what is moral for me vs. what is moral for you, it's a very short conversation. But I think we are talking about collective Candian moral standards here, and not mine or yours specifically.
When last I heard any polling done, I believe something to the tune of 75% of Canadians supported the death penalty. Perhaps it is simply time to amend the Charter.
Brutus said:
What threat? If they are imprisoned for life, there is no chance of repeat offences barring an escape.
A "life" sentence is never that unless they have the dangerous offender status tacked on. Even then, they can appeal every two years to have it lifted. And getting DO is VERY rare. As mentioned with Williams, if he doesn't kill himself (fingers crossed) he will likely be the model prisoner. 25 years hence he will have an excellent shot at getting out.
Brutus said:
I'm not sure what you're trying to say here. Are you saying the Dangerous Offender designation hasn't worked? I think it works rather well due to it's simplicity - if you are designated, you are held indefinitely until you are deemed to not be designated.
That is much easier said than done unfortunately.
Brutus said:
This problem should be addressed by securing the offender better, protecting the CO better, etc. The solution is not 'well, shoot, let's just kill him then.'
Why would you make a death penalty sentence sound frivolous or arbitrary? I think that we can all agree that were it to exist it would be leveled only after exceptional consideration and weighing of the facts.
canada94 said:
The perfect system? Eek. By "drugs" what do you mean?. You can have 1 gram of marijuana on you and you will most likely not even receive a fine. But you should get 20 years in your system. Yet you can break into someones house steal 5000 dollars worth of material and get less?. Absurd.
For the love of god, please lets not pick apart that post and turn this into a "Legalize the bud" discussion! I think we have one of those already somewhere.