ChatterBank0 min ago
Should A Punishment Fit The "outcome" Of A Crime?
13 Answers
Or the intention?
Just wondering, from a few threads I've seen recently, whether a sentence should reflect when someone has died, or whether it is the "action" that should be punished.
For example, if you hit someone in your car at 40mph and they die, should you have a more severe punishment than if you hit them at 40mph and they survive?
Just interested in your opinions and reasons why?
Just wondering, from a few threads I've seen recently, whether a sentence should reflect when someone has died, or whether it is the "action" that should be punished.
For example, if you hit someone in your car at 40mph and they die, should you have a more severe punishment than if you hit them at 40mph and they survive?
Just interested in your opinions and reasons why?
Answers
It must be a combination of the two. If you cause something to happen deliberately that must deserve more severe sanction than if you do it unintentiona lly At the same time, the severity must reflect the damage done So, if you deliberately drive your car into/and damage a neighbour you would expect to be dealt with more severely than if you drove into/and...
17:00 Fri 06th Sep 2013
It must be a combination of the two.
If you cause something to happen deliberately that must deserve more severe sanction than if you do it unintentionally
At the same time, the severity must reflect the damage done
So, if you deliberately drive your car into/and damage a neighbour you would expect to be dealt with more severely than if you drove into/and damage their fence
That would be factored by whether you did either of those things deliberately or unintentionally
If you cause something to happen deliberately that must deserve more severe sanction than if you do it unintentionally
At the same time, the severity must reflect the damage done
So, if you deliberately drive your car into/and damage a neighbour you would expect to be dealt with more severely than if you drove into/and damage their fence
That would be factored by whether you did either of those things deliberately or unintentionally
Yes. One of the things that made me think about it, was a story i read quite a long time ago.
A 3 year old toddler was hit and killed on a main road. The driver was not speeding, under the influence, or anything illegal. It happened around a blind bend. He was jailed for 8 years. While i completely understand the tragedy of it, and the driver, himself was traumatised, there was never a reason why a 3-yr- old was in the middle of a road on her own.
In the future, what will his sentence teach him?
I would be devastated if it happened to my child, obviously, but I don't see the driver committed a crime, while the parents endangered their child. Why was he punished and they weren't?
A 3 year old toddler was hit and killed on a main road. The driver was not speeding, under the influence, or anything illegal. It happened around a blind bend. He was jailed for 8 years. While i completely understand the tragedy of it, and the driver, himself was traumatised, there was never a reason why a 3-yr- old was in the middle of a road on her own.
In the future, what will his sentence teach him?
I would be devastated if it happened to my child, obviously, but I don't see the driver committed a crime, while the parents endangered their child. Why was he punished and they weren't?
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