Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Norways Massacre
I'm going to have to watch this again somehow, had one eye on it. the other on AB.
Has anyone watched this through..what are you're thoughts?
Has anyone watched this through..what are you're thoughts?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My husband and I said exactly the same Philtaz (Keystone cops) when their boat sank because they were too heavy for it and had to be rescued as it was sinking. Amusing yes, but certainly not amusing for the poor students who lost their lives through their inept actions, the Police have a lot to answer for.
that is true - and he gave a nazi salute too....all about self-attention. Shame that Norway doesn't have the death penalty and their murder max is, I think, only 16 years. Guess they could individualise the charges and make the sentences back-to-back as they would in the USA - he would be facing some 1200 years that way.
i didn't watch it, but had seen enough on the news when it first happened. Nut job perhaps, but don't expect this to be the last. There are lots of people like him around, not just in Norway, and i reckon that there will be more of the same in the not too distant future. He will get whatever the maximum sentence is presumably, but if that is only 16 years in Norway they will have to move the goalposts and put him away for good, whether that is prison or a maximum security hospital.
There are a couple of ways they can hold him as they don't have life imprisonment. I quote.
In 2008, to fulfill its requirements under the Rome Statute, Norway created a new maximal penalty of 30 years for crimes against humanity.
There is also an indeterminate penalty, called "containment" (Norwegian: forvaring), is set at 21 years imprisonment, and the prisoner is required to serve at least 10 years before becoming eligible for parole.
If the prisoner is still considered dangerous after serving the original sentence, the prisoner can receive up to five years additional containment. If the additional time is served, and the offender is still considered dangerous, a prisoner can continue to receive up to five years additional containment, and this, in theory, could result in actual life imprisonment.
"Containment" is used when the prisoner is deemed a danger to society and there is a great chance of committing violent crimes in the future.[
However, the offender can be paroled or released at any time if it is determined that the offender is no longer a danger to society.
So now we know.
In 2008, to fulfill its requirements under the Rome Statute, Norway created a new maximal penalty of 30 years for crimes against humanity.
There is also an indeterminate penalty, called "containment" (Norwegian: forvaring), is set at 21 years imprisonment, and the prisoner is required to serve at least 10 years before becoming eligible for parole.
If the prisoner is still considered dangerous after serving the original sentence, the prisoner can receive up to five years additional containment. If the additional time is served, and the offender is still considered dangerous, a prisoner can continue to receive up to five years additional containment, and this, in theory, could result in actual life imprisonment.
"Containment" is used when the prisoner is deemed a danger to society and there is a great chance of committing violent crimes in the future.[
However, the offender can be paroled or released at any time if it is determined that the offender is no longer a danger to society.
So now we know.
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