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Message
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:06 am to MorbidTheClown
Law is not emotional and we should not make law based on emotion.
How I feel in that situation is irrelevant to how the law should be.
How I feel in that situation is irrelevant to how the law should be.
This post was edited on 10/20/17 at 8:07 am
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:07 am to tss22h8
If I was watching, I would have stood up, pointed at him and went "AHHHHHHAHaHAHAahahahaha, you DyyyyING!"when he raised his middle fingers.
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:10 am to ThatMakesSense
quote:
Seriously? 20 years and it's waited upon until the very last minute.
I think that's cruel and unusual punishment.
I am sure the cop he killed died so peacefully.
frick that dude
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:18 am to tss22h8
"He shot Gordon five times as the officer sat in his patrol car after arriving at a traffic accident McNabb caused while fleeing a bail bondsman"
Officer Anderson Gordon
Officer Anderson Gordon
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:19 am to ksayetiger
He did it. He admitted he did it. He said he's sorry and is mad now that his hollow apology is not enough to save his life.
He's such a victim.
He's such a victim.
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:19 am to tss22h8
quote:this guy
McNabb raised both of his middle fingers twice during the lead-up to his death.
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:23 am to tss22h8
You know, I'm for the death penalty; but I've always had this one thought. What do I think is the harshest punishment? Spending the rest of my natural life locked behind bars with no possibility of getting out or laying down on a padded table and being put to sleep before a drug is administered that will instantly stop my heart?
Personally I would pick the quick and painless way out. So I cannot help but think that the death penalty is the least harsh punishment out of the two. Although I'm sure that if I were the family member of the victim that I would find justice and relief in the death of the perpetrator.
Personally I would pick the quick and painless way out. So I cannot help but think that the death penalty is the least harsh punishment out of the two. Although I'm sure that if I were the family member of the victim that I would find justice and relief in the death of the perpetrator.
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:26 am to tss22h8
Meanwhile, NOLA excuses slapdicks from this type of heinous crime just because of a little poo poo
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:30 am to Sticky37
Sure but
quote:isn't free
rest of my natural life locked behind bars with no possibility of getting out
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:51 am to tss22h8
quote:
To the state of Alabama, I hate you motherf***ers. I hate you. I hate you
RIP in peace LSU Patrick. Had no idea you were on death row
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:51 am to tss22h8
Motherfricker is suffering in hell right now
Posted on 10/20/17 at 8:59 am to tss22h8
quote:
"To the state of Alabama, I hate you motherf***ers. I hate you. I hate you."
Well at least there's something we can all agree with him on.
Posted on 10/20/17 at 9:04 am to tss22h8
cop killers and killer cops deserve the same fate.
Posted on 10/20/17 at 9:07 am to TH03
quote:
Eh even pieces of shite have a right to exhaust all their appeals.
I agree the process should take a few years for most, but there are some cases where the guy should be executed within a week of being arrested. There is no reason Derrick Todd Lee should have died in prison 15 years after he raped and murdered a bunch women. They should have executed him the day they caught him. When the guilt is so clear, and the crime is so heinous, just get it over with and kill them. we don't need 20 years of wasted money and time.
Posted on 10/20/17 at 9:37 am to TH03
quote:
But how many people have been exonerated by DNA decades after their sentencing?
A handful, but those crimes all occurred when DNA testing was less sophisticated or nonexistent.
I'm not saying there won't be wrongful convictions, but if the conviction is based on DNA evidence, that's going to be nearly impossible.
Posted on 10/20/17 at 9:43 am to TH03
quote:
But how many people have been exonerated by DNA decades after their sentencing?
I'd rather have 10 killers live 20 more years than to execute someone who was wrongfully convicted of a crime he didn't commit.
I agree wth you to an extent. The thought of executing an innocent person is horrifying, and it’s probably happened. But the process of clearing people through dna or whatever shouldn’t take 20 years. Most overturned capital convictions aren’t even about guilt/innocence. It’s defense lawyers finding technicalities, or arguing about racist jury pools, or that the murderer was mildly retarded. So the overturned convictions you hear about is mostly turning those death row inmates into life without parole inmates. Big whoop.
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