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Should the ripper get a release date?
Good old ooman rites being used by criminal scum again! you couldn't make it up! personally I'd give him a release date of 21/01/2099! (front page of the Express)
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No best answer has yet been selected by R1Geezer. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think steg has a very interesting point sticking out of a sea of knee jerk reactions and it rather goes to the heart of how we think of mental illness and crime.
Most people are just saying what they think - which is boring rather than why they think them - which is interesting.
Opinions are like hemmerhoids - most ar$eholes have them!
One of the criteria for a whole life tarrifs is
murder of two or more persons, where each murder involves any of the following :
* a substantial degree of premeditation or planning,
* the abduction of the victim, or
* sexual or sadistic conduct,
So Sutcliffe clearly falls into this category - the question is whether or not his schizophrenia reduced his responsibility enough to make that sentence wrong.
At the original trial the schizophrenia was rejected (clearly wrongly and probably for political reasons) which made this somewhat contraversial.
It's academic really though - perhaps he should be given a fixed term sentence rather than a whole life term - but he'd still be detained under an IPP (imprisonment for public protection).
Tabloid headlines suggesting that he'd end up getting released are just mischivious designed to wind up the public
So far so good in that department then
Most people are just saying what they think - which is boring rather than why they think them - which is interesting.
Opinions are like hemmerhoids - most ar$eholes have them!
One of the criteria for a whole life tarrifs is
murder of two or more persons, where each murder involves any of the following :
* a substantial degree of premeditation or planning,
* the abduction of the victim, or
* sexual or sadistic conduct,
So Sutcliffe clearly falls into this category - the question is whether or not his schizophrenia reduced his responsibility enough to make that sentence wrong.
At the original trial the schizophrenia was rejected (clearly wrongly and probably for political reasons) which made this somewhat contraversial.
It's academic really though - perhaps he should be given a fixed term sentence rather than a whole life term - but he'd still be detained under an IPP (imprisonment for public protection).
Tabloid headlines suggesting that he'd end up getting released are just mischivious designed to wind up the public
So far so good in that department then
while I'm happy for judges to do the sentencing on behalf of society (including me), I sometimes think it could do with more transparency. Life should mean life (though it should be used sparingly), 20 years should mean 20 years not 10, and so forth. Like price reductions should be shown on the tags, not be applied later at the till. I think people - the prisoner and the public - are entitled to know what they're getting.
If it's accepted that prisoners should be able to earn time off for good behaviour, then perhaps something like the US system of 'five to 10' could be used.
If it's accepted that prisoners should be able to earn time off for good behaviour, then perhaps something like the US system of 'five to 10' could be used.
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