PlasmaBomb
Lifer
- Nov 19, 2004
- 11,636
- 2
- 81
Originally posted by: Patranus
http://www.google.com/hostedne...4qrscUG2t-KKgD98O27RG0
He received 2x 5 year terms PLUS 3x 20 year terms.
You fail at math.
It is 3 x 30 year terms (+ 2 x 5 year)
Originally posted by: Patranus
http://www.google.com/hostedne...4qrscUG2t-KKgD98O27RG0
He received 2x 5 year terms PLUS 3x 20 year terms.
Originally posted by: Slick5150
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: ElFenix
i didn't even need to click on the link to guess it was here in texas. our criminal system absolutely fails when it comes to retards.
Yeah you'd think they'd have some empathy.
Ok, that made me laugh.
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: Slick5150
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: ElFenix
i didn't even need to click on the link to guess it was here in texas. our criminal system absolutely fails when it comes to retards.
Yeah you'd think they'd have some empathy.
Ok, that made me laugh.
Glad I'm not the only one.![]()
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: Slick5150
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: ElFenix
i didn't even need to click on the link to guess it was here in texas. our criminal system absolutely fails when it comes to retards.
Yeah you'd think they'd have some empathy.
Ok, that made me laugh.
Glad I'm not the only one.![]()
Can anyone explain it to me?
Originally posted by: Patranus
I don't want a violent person running around society, ESPECIALLY someone who doesn't know the difference between right and wrong. Someone who doesn't know the difference between right and wrong is significantly MORE dangerous to society.
Empathy has no place in the court room. The law is the law. Just because someone has a "special circumstance" doesn't mean they should get special treatment. EVERYONE has their own "special circumstance".
Originally posted by: chess9
Texas still uses the McNaughton Rule:
"The "McNaughton rule" was a standard to be applied by the jury, after hearing medical testimony from prosecution and defense experts. The rule created a presumption of sanity, unless the defense proved "at the time of committing the act, the accused was laboring under such a defect of reason, from disease of the mind, as not to know the nature and quality of the act he was doing or, if he did know it, that he did not know what he was doing was wrong."
I'm assuming the defense put on evidence of mental defect and the jury didn't buy it. This suggests that juries in Texas are probably not sympathetic to this sort of defense.Does that surprise anyone here?
-Robert
Originally posted by: CitizenKain
Originally posted by: Patranus
I don't want a violent person running around society, ESPECIALLY someone who doesn't know the difference between right and wrong. Someone who doesn't know the difference between right and wrong is significantly MORE dangerous to society.
Empathy has no place in the court room. The law is the law. Just because someone has a "special circumstance" doesn't mean they should get special treatment. EVERYONE has their own "special circumstance".
Do you practice at being wrong all the time?
Considering it was in Texas, he's lucky he didn't get the chair. The bloodthirsty idiots who run the state seem to have some sort of pleasure executing mentally handicapped people.
Originally posted by: Wreckem
The Defense pled GUILTY to five felony counts. The defense attorney was incompetent. You don't have a client plead guilty to five felony counts unless you have a deal setup with the prosecution, more so if your client is retarded/mentally incapacitated. The defense should have NEVER of pled guilty to five counts in court leaving it up to a jury to decide the clients fate.
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: Slick5150
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: ElFenix
i didn't even need to click on the link to guess it was here in texas. our criminal system absolutely fails when it comes to retards.
Yeah you'd think they'd have some empathy.
Ok, that made me laugh.
Glad I'm not the only one.![]()
Originally posted by: Patranus
I don't want a violent person running around society, ESPECIALLY someone who doesn't know the difference between right and wrong. Someone who doesn't know the difference between right and wrong is significantly MORE dangerous to society.
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: ElFenix
i didn't even need to click on the link to guess it was here in texas. our criminal system absolutely fails when it comes to retards.
Yeah you'd think they'd have some empathy.
Empathy has no place in the court room. The law is the law. Just because someone has a "special circumstance" doesn't mean they should get special treatment. EVERYONE has their own "special circumstance".
Originally posted by: OCguy
Originally posted by: Wreckem
The Defense pled GUILTY to five felony counts. The defense attorney was incompetent. You don't have a client plead guilty to five felony counts unless you have a deal setup with the prosecution, more so if your client is retarded/mentally incapacitated. The defense should have NEVER of pled guilty to five counts in court leaving it up to a jury to decide the clients fate.
This. He sounds almost as bad as my Public Pretender attorney on my DUI.