On September 6, 1901 Leon Czolgosz shot president William McKinley. McKinley died of his injuries eight days later. Czolgosz's trial started on September 23, he was convicted the next day, and on September 26 he was sentenced to death. Czolgosz was electrocuted on October 29, 1901.
On November 5, 2009, Major Nidal Hasan murdered 32 people at Fort Hood, Texas. Right now his court martial is scheduled for August 20, nearly three years after the shootings that he is unquestionably guilty of. He will probably be sentenced to death, but with the way the appeals process for military death sentences works he'll probably die of natural causes before the sentence is carried out.
On January 8, 2011, Jared Lee Loughner murdered 6 people in a shooting spree that also badly injured congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. It has been a year and a half since then and the legal wrangling about his mental competency is still ongoing and a trial does not appear to be anywhere close.
I'd imagine the point I'm trying to make is rather clear. Our legal system used to have some kind of common sense. If you committed a terrible crime that you were unquestionably guilty of justice was swift and final. When you commit murder in front of dozens of witnesses there's no need for endless legal handwringing, hundreds of thousands of pages of BS paperwork and years of delay. Yes some cases are far more complicated but the two that I cited are not. Our society has advanced in almost every area except for in how we deal with crime.
On November 5, 2009, Major Nidal Hasan murdered 32 people at Fort Hood, Texas. Right now his court martial is scheduled for August 20, nearly three years after the shootings that he is unquestionably guilty of. He will probably be sentenced to death, but with the way the appeals process for military death sentences works he'll probably die of natural causes before the sentence is carried out.
On January 8, 2011, Jared Lee Loughner murdered 6 people in a shooting spree that also badly injured congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. It has been a year and a half since then and the legal wrangling about his mental competency is still ongoing and a trial does not appear to be anywhere close.
I'd imagine the point I'm trying to make is rather clear. Our legal system used to have some kind of common sense. If you committed a terrible crime that you were unquestionably guilty of justice was swift and final. When you commit murder in front of dozens of witnesses there's no need for endless legal handwringing, hundreds of thousands of pages of BS paperwork and years of delay. Yes some cases are far more complicated but the two that I cited are not. Our society has advanced in almost every area except for in how we deal with crime.