3 Quizzes, Closing Date 30 November 2024
Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Most days now you get a shocking newspaper story which goes beyond anything you could stand to imagine or believe - 2 recent examples of a 3 year old girl raped and today a 12 week old baby raped. The 2 offenders got prison sentences but with the way the legal system works in Britain they will be out and about in a year or so. Bad enough for adults but how much worse will society get over the next 10 years for our children if something isn't done about how we deal with dangerous people like these?
No best answer has yet been selected by JackieP10. 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.Anyone remember Colin Stagg? They thought he had murdered Rachel Nickells on Wimbledon Common. They set up a 'honey-trap': a plainclothes policewoman tried to seduce him, saying she loved violence and would sleep with him if he would just admit to the killing.
Fortunately, Stagg stuck to his guns and said he didn't do it. But supposed he'd yielded to lust, or just a desire to get his name in the papers, and pretended he'd done it? Where would he be now? In jail. And where would he be if the death penalty had been in force? He'd be dead.
But he was innocent. Anyone supporting the death penalty will have to ponder how he - and plenty of other innocent people who have been put in jail - could ever be recompensed. And all those volunteering to be the executioner might like to consider just how they'd feel when he'd been posthumously cleared?
So if a person was found guilty of killing two children, I assume (Lonnie ********) that you would be happy to 'kill them off'.
Just a thought - what about Angela Cannings.
I guess it is down to what is 'guilty beyond doubt'. Obviously in the eyes of the first judge / jury, she was guilty beyond all reasonable doubt. How much of an appeals process would you sugggest? From what I can gather, in the States, if someone is on death row, the appeals procedure last for many years (possibly the equivalent of life over here).
I would possibly also suggest that those people who think that jail is 'cushy' should go on an open day to one.
I doubt the death penalty will come back,but what we need is tougher law and order measures of zero tolerance. It has worked in New York and Birmingham,Alabama.
Murderers like Huntley (and that sicko,who raped the little baby) should be told by a judge that they are going to prison for life - as in walking into prison on two legs and coming out in a wooden box. No consideration should be given for parole.
Drug peddlers should be banished for life,and the same applies to armed robbers. Those who on the wrong side of the law should feel the punishment and those on the right side should be able to feel safe to walk the streets,dismantle fortresses they have to convert their homes into,be assured their children can play safely outside and old people need no longer to lock up their houses.
It can be done - no gimmicks,but more policing the streets,dealing with real crime and if means a copper ******** an offender,then so be it.
Ta Ta
Marky B
jno Colin Stagg wasnt convicted because the police used an illegal means of entrapment. The Met are not looking for anyone else in connection with killing Rachel.
I say it again and I'll keep on saying it:- HANG ALL MURDERERS.
We can prove it now with DNA, there is hardly and reasonable doubt when this is used, AND the are not free to kill again
I have mixed views on this subject myself but just a little thought - science is exact but the human use of scientific methods is not so results such as those of a DNA test can be inaccurate.
Also people of power have a tendancy to lie. Don't kid urself for a second that some high ranking police chief or government official wouldn't think of framing someone for a crime if an investigation wasn't going well and the public was getting stressed about it, purely to look like they were doing their job and "keep the peace".
That said I do believe in harsher punishments but the death penalty is not an anwer because there are too many cases where innocent people are wrongly convicted.
Lonnie - I did not call you a name - I promise. It is rather bad editing by Ab Ed.
I put brackets Lonnie & another user's name close brackets. It turned out that there was an imposter and it was not the user I thought. The Ed then removed the imposters post, the poster who's pointed out that there was an imposter, and then my apology.
I think that is about as clear as mud, but suffice to say, I did not call you a name and the asterix refers to another user!