Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
18Years Only For Murder ?
Why not life for the coward ?
http:// www.mir ror.co. uk/news /uk-new s/imran -dougla s-murde red-mar gery-gi lby-271 0738
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I thoroughly agree with you tambo. It was a wicked thing to do. I think an appeal could be made to increase the sentence, but not quite sure of this. It was probably light because of his age when he did the murder, although in my opinion it does not matter how old he was he should get a full sentence and never be let out again.
Here we go again. It is not 18 years. It is 18 years served before he can be considered for release.
Where has the idea come from the lifers, and those who were, in the old days, granted a reprieve from the death sentence, ever served life? They never did; I have heard of lifers who were out in 8 years. The only ones who might serve life were those in Broadmoor, who were so dangerously insane that it was never safe to let them out, however old they got.
Where has the idea come from the lifers, and those who were, in the old days, granted a reprieve from the death sentence, ever served life? They never did; I have heard of lifers who were out in 8 years. The only ones who might serve life were those in Broadmoor, who were so dangerously insane that it was never safe to let them out, however old they got.
18 years doesn't seen that light a sentence when contrasted with this.
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -northe rn-irel and-248 72839
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It would seem to me that any sentence passed after a horrible crime like this should serve two purposes. One to punish and the other to deter. If what Fred tells us is correct, and he is always right (!) than Douglas will be 35 before he can be considered for release. Nearly half his life will have gone by. He will always be a convicted murderer for the rest of his life. But will this sentence deter anybody else from committing another crime like this ?
Presumably this chap didn't look up the sentencing guidelines on the 'net before he went out that day. I can't tell from the Daily Mirror link why he committed this crime...was it drugs, or drink or mental illness...we are not told.
These crimes are rare, thank goodness. Whatever sentence this judge could have passed won't make any difference as far as I can see.
Presumably this chap didn't look up the sentencing guidelines on the 'net before he went out that day. I can't tell from the Daily Mirror link why he committed this crime...was it drugs, or drink or mental illness...we are not told.
These crimes are rare, thank goodness. Whatever sentence this judge could have passed won't make any difference as far as I can see.
No,baz, the parole people cannot let a murderer out before he has served the minimum term specified, be it 12 years, 18 years, 20 years or whatever !
What they can do is let him out on day release when he is very near the end of the term and we had an absurd case of that recently, when the man took his day outside as an opportunity to commit a similar crime. It is to be hoped that they no longer practice this absurdity.
What they can do is let him out on day release when he is very near the end of the term and we had an absurd case of that recently, when the man took his day outside as an opportunity to commit a similar crime. It is to be hoped that they no longer practice this absurdity.
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Presumably this chap didn't look up the sentencing guidelines on the 'net before he went out that day
That's the problem with theories of deterrence, they don't work. People just assume they'll get away with whatever crimes they commit. As has been said, it's the certainty of punishment - not the severity of it - that deters. Given the low crime clear-up rates, there's no such certainty.
An 18-year minimum seems quite a long time to me. How many people are sure they'll be alive to see him released in (at the earliest) 2031? Not me.
That's the problem with theories of deterrence, they don't work. People just assume they'll get away with whatever crimes they commit. As has been said, it's the certainty of punishment - not the severity of it - that deters. Given the low crime clear-up rates, there's no such certainty.
An 18-year minimum seems quite a long time to me. How many people are sure they'll be alive to see him released in (at the earliest) 2031? Not me.
families are always devastated when someone dies. But as has been mentioned on other threads, there are still different degrees of murder. If it's seen only as manslaughter, the sentence might be quite short - though the family will be just as upset about the death (and probably more so about the sentence). Personal reactions aren't the only thing weighed up.
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