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Brihard said:Ugh. Subjecting the judiciary to the whims of the mob isn't a great idea. Yeah, some judges might not go with what we feel is right as individuals, but ultimately their cases are subject to review by higher courts if there's a miscarriage of justice. I strongly believe in the need for an independent judiciary, and one that doesn't have to tread on eggshells out of fear of not getting re-elected.
No. There is no review by the higher court unless a case is appealed by a Crown. And when that happens, the petty-ass Lords make sure that the Crown that offended them pays dearly and gets no convictions for a long time. Plus, the time wasting system that we have now does not allow for the Crowns to appeal, since just getting cases to court the first time is a huge enough effort as it is.
Brihard said:Recceguy- Our system has a lot of flaws, but sentence length is not one of them. Statistics show that the stiffer a sentence, the more likely one is to eventually re-offend. It's counter intuitive, I know, but the longer someone's locked away the fewer options they have when they get out.
Bullshit. Sentence length is a massive problem, and a guy in jail is not going to re-offend in public. Simple.
Brihard said:If you just want to punish or segregate the guy, OK, fine- but if your goal is to reintegrate them into society (which the majority do successfully), handing down huge sentences isn't the way to do it. That said, a lot of reform is necessary in many areas to make the system better. Judges are not pro-criminal, though; they're just versed in what works, or at least what does the least net harm. Locking someone in jail is not, in most cases, either necessary or constructive in their reform- at least not the way our jails are run. Turn them all into club Ed and maybe we'll have something.
You are smoking friggin' rope.
Judges have no clue what works. Reintegration does not work. Club Ed does not work. The legal system is so bankrupt of credibility that even the defense lawyers around here have to laugh and acknowledge what a joke it is.
Brihard said:http://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/text/pblct/forum/e053/e053h_e.shtml
Here you go. A few of the raw numbers- out of offenders released on full parole, 72% of those subjected to the study were completely successful after at least seven years of observation. Of the remainder who were readmitted, roughly half were readmitted for technical violations, not for new offences.
Wow. What an obnoxious and arrogant piece of broadband that was. Liberal fuzzy logic at its best. The part I like is how they try to suggest that technical violations are somehow "nit picking" and really not a big deal. And the criteria for success was simply to not re-offend for the same federal offence. So, on the rare chance some clown finally got dealt with by way of indictment, if he didn't get it a second time, he was deemed to be "successful"? Pathetic and ridiculous. You would have to make a conscious decision to be ignorant to even start to believe in such biased crap.
Brihard said:Nonetheless, these numbers support my claim that the majority of released offenders reintegrate into society successfully.
No, the numbers support somebodies attempt to candy coat the fact that the legal system is a donkey show.
Brihard said:Moving on, what in your mind, constitutes an 'effective sentence'? If it's keeping the prisoner segregated for life from the rest of society, so be it- but prepare to fork over many more tax dollars. If it's getting them back into society, sentencing should be focused on subjecting the inmate to programming to help control behavioural patterns, giving them trade or skills training so they have OPTIONS when they exit prison, treating dependencies they may have, etc. Throwing a person in prison merely as punishment is inefficient if it offers no advantage in reducing their rate of reoffence.
But it takes them out of the game so they can't re-offend. Rehabilitation is a paper tiger and does not work. Plus, it only exists at the Federal level, and since no one ever gets dealt with by way of indictment, they won't end up in that system anyway.
Brihard said:A hefty fine or probation can both be effective in many cases to convince a person to get a grip on their behaviour.
More arse talking. All a fine does is encourage a criminal to commit more crime so he can pay the fine off. Do you want your home to be the one that gets broken in to so Jimmy Asshat can pay off his $7000 Judge-pretending-to-be-a-real-hard-ass fine?
And probation is a joke. Almost every rounder I know plans his crack head schedule around pleading out for breaches of probation. "I got three breaches. I plead guilty, I'm gonna do two weeks and I'll be out for May two-four". These dinks know sentencing better than the Crowns do.
Brihard said:People generally have a hard-on for throwing the book at prisoners. Make no mistake, I'm not trying to excuse or to lessen the harm of what criminals do, but one must view them as 'broken' members of society, and many of them can be fixed. There are effective systems for determining an offender's risk of reoffence, and these must be used and studied further so as to make the parole system as valid a predictor of an offenders level of risk as possible.
No, one does not have to view them as being "broken". One can view them as being useless kit and recommend that they be taken out and dumped in a corn field. However, if there was a system that created a mindset in the ACTUAL CRIMINAL that suggested to him "Hey Jackass, your next hit is going to be your last" then perhaps things could start to change.
Brihard said:As for this 'three strikes' crap? Garbage. How many kids get busted for several stupid things in their 20s, and by the time they're 30 have settled down with a girl, don't act retarded anymore, and have a family and a job to worry about? You're telling me a kid with a DUI and a couple short terms for public order offences should go to jail for life when all he needs to do is grow up a bit and get his shit together? I don't buy it.
You can dislike statistics and academic research all you want, and sources do need to be examined, but most of it is valid.
See, now you are showing that you have an agenda and are trying to deliberately skew the discussion. The "Three Strikes" concept is for violent crime, and I suspect you know that. Obviously, if a guy gets done for shoplifting, a breach and a fail to attend, he is not going to go to jail for the rest of his life.
Brihard said:Rather that demanding more proof from my side, let's see some research you guys can provide that justifies more than the strictly necessary restriction or revocation and liberty for a person who commits an offence. Right in the criminal code it says that sentences should not be any more than is necessary to achieve the aims of sentencing- rehabilitation, denunciation, deterrence general and specific, and punishment. Ours is not a retributive system; it's designed to rehabilitate, and in the majority of cases is successful, even as flawed as it currently is.
See, I would love to trot out stats for what you are asking for, but sadly the system only provides weakness and uselessness. At such time as a pilot project is put together and a group is given a free hand to obliterate a bunch of rounders, I will be the first to sign up and will submit whatever statistical reviews are asked of me.
Brihard said:I'd be curious to see a properly done cost benefit analysis comparing the cost of various programs to assist inmates in squaring themselves away with the economic costs as a result of both further crime and of further incarceration. Call it an investment, if you will- pay some to help inmates now so we don't pay more to feed and house them again later.
If you want to make it a money game, then take a look at the cost of cutting these clowns loose and how much harm they cause while they are out.
Or even better, you make an argument for capital punishment. But that is a separate subject of other threads.
Smashing on through the tripe...
Brihard said:Academics doesn't deal with individual cases. I challenge you to point out where I've said otherwise. Saying that offender program X vs offender program Y will result in 8% fewer re-convictions post release doesn't mean that in the case of Joe Bloggins offender it will make that specific difference. Demonstrating that probation and fines is more effective in some minor offences than incarceration doesn't mean that joe blow shouldn't be jailed for his particular stunt, or that a fine is all that's necessary in every case. I'd never take the studies to the range- but I'd take them to policy and legislation debates, because that's what they're intended for, and I've never claimed otherwise.
Because you are a candy ass contrarian. You have the luxury of sitting wherever you are and typing out your crap without ever really needing to worry about how it affects the real world. But people like you are what is wrong with this county. Mealy mouthed nay sayers that just sit back and criticize without really knowing what the hell is going on in the real world. And the killer? You are so friggin convinced of your convictions because a book tells you something. Pathetic.
Brihard said:Please don't make inferences about what I'm saying, as everything I claim in a discussion like this is meant to be taken at face value and with the limits inherent in what is actually said. Research hits the range only in studies that have positive application to individuals- i.e., psychological research into methods of anger management training, or offender risk profiling, or criminal interrogation methods, etc.
Then why are you going to the wall for it? Kind of too late to back pedal now.
Brihard said:Before you go slamming the value of criminological research, ask yourself why the system is the way it is today: hint, it's not the whims of correction or law enforcement officers; it's the policies laid down by governmental agencies derived from hundreds or thousands of studies into what does and does not work, filtered through the processes of politics and bureaucracy. I'd never presume to tell a corrections officer or official how to do his job; I only bring up data which ought to be considered in debating the matter at hand. Don't kill the messenger here, I'm just presenting another side to the party line, and if I step on a few toes, so be it. The second I am demonstrated to be wrong on anything I say, I will gladly admit it and learn from it.
Disingenuous bullshit. Yes. Kill the messenger. Because you have been more than just a messenger. You have been an advocate of all that is wrong in the legal system. Why is the system the way is it? Maybe a quarter decade of Liberal morass and behind-the-scenes wrangling. Maybe a quarter decade of Liberal judicial appointments of judges that make Jack Layton look like Brian Mulroney.
You say you will learn from being demonstrated wrong, but you openly blow off people like Bruce who actually live within the system. You have pretty much said that you will only respect statistics and studies, and those really hold no sway in the real world where some of us live.
Brihard said:Academics study real life in broad terms and samples. Understanding the interplay between research data and action or policy is vital to having a grasp of the whole picture of any system or institution, and that's all I'm trying to claim in this particular instance. Just don't dismiss study as useless in all cases- that is an assertion you cannot prove.
That is just one of the saddest things I have ever read. Truly, you must have no mirrors in your home.
Brihard said:Back to the original start of this whole mess, the only thing I've positively claimed is that stiffer sentencing has not been demonstrated to have a positive effect in reducing rates of recidivism. No one has yet shown me anything to prove me incorrect. I'd rather not drag this thread further off topic with more of an academic tangent though, and I've got a paper to finish, so I'll take this up again sometime tomorrow.
And that is again the paper tiger. Screw recidivism. That rate is high, because there is no real reason to fear being found guilty. Rehabilitation is a bunch of crap too. There is no real reason to try to change, because it is easy to be a criminal. No sentences. No penalties. No real bad times when you are in jail. Where is the down side?
As for proving you incorrect, those of us who "get it" know how way off you are. You are just another anchor that is dragging down the fabric of our society, and telling anyone who will listen how great and helpful you are.
I hope your paper was wildly successful and garners you much academic accolades, and you get to bask in the heady glow of intellectual addoration.
But please know that the people who actually deal with the ones you are so quick to speak up for have summed you up and have seen your true colours.