http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/18/us/politics/18offenders.html
5/17/2010 9:35:04 PM
5/17/2010 9:35:39 PM
welcome to humanityi do think though that the legal system in its current form can't properly handle sex offenders. The hypocrisy is sex offense laws is merely a symptom of this perhaps, and not themselves a problem. They are more of a stop-gap solution until someone figures out what the real issue is. I have never read or heard about a logically consistent solution to handling sex offenders.I have heard though that sex offense recidivism is not much higher in actuality than other crimes, and it's more the moral outrage of sex offender crimes that causes people to treat them so differently.
5/17/2010 9:38:43 PM
When the revolution comes, its leaders will be framed as sex offenders.
5/17/2010 9:40:52 PM
activist judges
5/17/2010 9:55:05 PM
can't wait to read back through this thread and see who the closet sex offenders are, based on their posts
5/17/2010 10:14:36 PM
i thought the supreme court was finish off this ruling by saying....yo homes to bel air!
5/17/2010 10:24:15 PM
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126894305&ft=1&f=1001Supreme Court rejects life without parole for juveniles in non-homicide cases
5/18/2010 12:29:11 AM
JUSTICE SERVED!
5/22/2010 8:12:05 AM
Well, it's good that we actually are freeing him, it's appalling that it took this long, that he will probably receive very limited remuneration for his time spent in prison, and there is nothing that can be done to help him recapture the time lost.
5/22/2010 12:08:44 PM
He could potentially get $750k, which works out to about $47k/yr before taxes.I wonder how much they tax a lump sum payment of that size?
5/22/2010 12:19:53 PM
It's tax free actually. And he was released not due to "justice", but because it was politically beneficial.
5/22/2010 1:29:44 PM