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Latest post 06-22-2010 6:27 PM by luannv07. 197 replies.
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01-01-2001 12:00 AM
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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THANK GOD FOR MR. CUSHINGBERRY
LOOKS LIKE WE WILL FINALLY GET SOMETHING DONE NOW THAT THE DEMOCRATS ARE IN CONTROL! :) I SUPPORT BILLS 4262 & 4263. THANK GOD FOR MR. CUSHINGBERRY.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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"issues" in your long list of excuses.
several have been covered before, but one or two are 'new'.
the first is the issue of "innocent prisoners".
that would presume that the criminal justice system is completely faulty at it's core, or else that there are those in this state who would lie in open court, without anyone contradicting them, to get someone who is factually innocent sent to prison.
is the criminal justice system THAT faulty?
are there that many such people who live here that this is not just a possibility, but a PROBABILITY?
unless you are using FACTUAL INNOCENCE as just another in your long list of excuses, that is the ONLY ISSUE that you should be rousing mad about.
now, if you ARE using FACTUAL INNOCENCE as just another in your long list of excuses, then you will not be able to tell me of one FACTUALLY INNOCENT INMATE currently in jail.
if you happen to know of any, and can provide us with the provable FACTS OF THE CASE, we will have that inmate released immediately. imagine the public outcry when it hears that the state of michigan, as a matter of policy, incarcerates innocent people.
i hope you can substantiate this claim.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Montana Senate Does It Right - The Way It Should Be
Mont. Senate OKs ending death penalty; Measure carries 27-22 despite polls showing Montanans back punishment [The Associated Press - Feb 23, 2007]
HELENA, Mont. - The Senate on Friday gave preliminary approval to abolishing the death penalty.
After a lengthy debate in which lawmakers quoted Jesus, Thomas Jefferson and Ted Bundy, the Senate voted 27-22 to approve the measure.
The measure's sponsor, Sen. Dan Harrington, D-Butte, implored his colleagues to "show true political leadership" and do away with capital punishment, despite polls that show the majority of Montanans support it.
Proponents of the measure said the death penalty is costly, unfair and does not serve as a deterrent.
"I don't think we should be in the killing business," said Sen. Dan Weinberg, D-Whitefish.
Opponents countered that the death penalty was needed to help victim's families.
"This is simply closure," said Sen. Greg Barkus, R-Kalispell.
I QUOTE: "Proponents of the measure said the death penalty is costly, unfair and does not serve as a deterrent."
= NO STATE SHOULD BE IN THE KILLING BUSINESS. NO STATE IN AMERICA =
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Former Prosecutor Against Capital Punishment (and I agree w/her)
Filan: Death penalty for murderer will not achieve justice or relieve pain
LEGAL ANALYSIS By Susan Filan
Senior legal analyst
Feb 5, 2007
A woman who is accused of cutting a 7-month-old fetus from her friend's womb will face the death penalty. Tiffany Hall, 24, will also be charged with killing her friend's three other children ages 7, 2 and 1. Their bodies were found in a washer and dryer, drowned, two days after 23-year-old Jimella Tunstall's body was found in a weedy lot. Ms. Hall allegedly confessed to killing the three children for whom she used to baby-sit. The St. Clair County, Ill., state attorney called the slaying "cold, calculated and premeditated."
But Illinois has a moratorium on capital punishment since 2000 when the governor put executions on hold. The moratorium has never been lifted. Two questions arise for me in contemplating this heinous case: First, why seek the death penalty if the governor has it on hold? And second, why seek the death penalty at all when, presumably, the reason it is invoked in this case is because a sacred line has been crossed -- the sanctity of life. When an unborn fetus is slain and innocent children are murdered, the outrage is visceral. But why respond to killing by state-sanctioned killing, particularly in a state where the government is loathe to sanction it?
Most states have the death penalty, but not all do. Alaska, Hawaii, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Rhode Island, Vermont, West Virginia and Wisconsin do not, according to The Death Penalty Information Center. New Jersey is in the process of abolishing the death penalty. New York has overturned its law as unconstitutional and has not reinstated it. Eight other states including California, Missouri, Maryland, Florida, North Carolina, Tennessee, Ohio and Delaware have halted the death penalty over the issues raised by lethal injection. Most states use lethal injection as the method of execution, having for the most part abandoned death by electrocution, hanging and the gas chamber.
The issues raised by the death penalty debate range from arbitrariness to innocence to legal representation to mental illness to morality and fairness. As a former prosecutor I believe I understand the emotion involved in a murder case. I have seen firsthand the rage and fury and grief that families of murder victims express. The pain is indescribable. But I have never understood how killing the killer in return achieves justice or relieves pain. Why isn't life in prison without parole punishment enough?
If we punish killers, because killing is wrong, why is it right to kill a killer? As shocking and gruesome and cruel as Tiffany Hall's alleged murder of her 23-year-old friend, her 7-month-old fetus, and her three children, isn't killing Tiffany Hall equally wrong? If Tiffany Hall is convicted, she should spend the rest of her life in prison without parole.
Some would argue that if the victim was not allowed to live, why should the murderer be allowed to live with "three hots and a cot" for life? We also say that one of the reasons one may not take the law into one's own hands is to prevent vigilante justice based on emotion and a thirst for revenge. We have established a system based on the democratic principal that we leave punishment to be meted out by objective, neutral and independent magistrates who dispassionately dispense justice. Wouldn't this negate the need to kill a killer because a killer has killed?
Some say the death penalty is appropriate in a case like this to send a clear message that this kind of killing is wrong—that it will act as a deterrent. But there have been decades of studies and yet no conclusive proof that the death penalty acts as a deterrent at all. It is still an open question, and a question that some say may never be answered.
To say "if this case doesn't deserve the death penalty, which case does?" raises the question of who decides what crimes are the worst, and who decides whose murder is worse than the other? This smacks of emotion. The law must be based on reason and rationality. That is why we don't let crime victims determine punishment. They may be heard at sentencing, and their remarks considered, but we don't and can't let crime victims drive the criminal justice system.
So should we make it all or nothing? Either every murder deserves the death penalty, or no murder deserves the death penalty? This would destroy prosecutorial discretion, which is necessary so that each case can be decided on a case by case basis. Prosecutors aren't sausage makers.
Jimella Tunstall, her 7 month old fetus, and her three children deserve justice. But how does a state-sanctioned killing achieve that? How do two wrongs make a right?
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crazycajun



- Joined on 11-22-2008
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instead of griping about being asked a question, why don't you SUPPLY AN ANSWER?
NORMAL people ANSWER questions, TROLLS shiver under bridges AVOIDING questions.
do you not answer because you DON'T KNOW, or you DON'T CARE?
if you don't know, keep asking, that's how you educate yourself.
if you don't care, i pity you.
michigan constitution, article 1. Sec. 6.
Every person has a right to keep and bear arms for the defense of himself and the state.
keep your powder dry.
"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote." Bovard 1994
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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what's the matter, troll...
questions too tough for you?
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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it is a privelege.
it is granted by the state. it can be taken away by the state.
it is NOT granted to all convicts in every case.
stop acting as if it is a right, and start acting like it's a privelege.
by the way, it's not the prison's job to educate your loved one. if he is uneducated, it's because HE failed to attend the FREE schooling our taxes paid for. he WASTED his time and OUR MONEY.
he sits in prison AT OUR EXPENSE, WASTING his time and OUR MONEY.
we spend $38,000.00 a year to keep your loved one warm and happy. for that amount of money, we can pay a teacher for a year, or a policeman, or a fireman.
with that amount of money, we can completely replace the recreational equipment at a city park, or buy a few hundred books at a library.
we could buy a new school bus, or a new snowplow, or make payments on equipment to repair the roads.
but no, we have to keep your loved one, who cannot keep himself from doing the wrong thing.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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we paid for his education
in the first place, which must not have "stuck" because he has to repeat it in jail.
while he is in jail, we pay $38,000 a year to keep him there, thats $104.11 a day.
not only that, we have to pay the cops that arrested him, the judge that sentenced him, and the guard that keeps him locked up.
the pittance he pays in 'restitution fees' to the county don't even BEGIN to cover these expenses.
i believe that IF he is ever released, and he re-offends (almost a certainty) that he should have to do his entire stretch for THAT crime, and any remaining time from the one he got out early on.
i also believe that if your 'loved one' is a habitual offender, (not a FIRST TIMER), that he should not even be able to be considered for any good time. he doesn't deserve it, he's already blown his 'second chance'.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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I don't think you understand
My husband is a first time offender. For the first year the Federal government pays the $30,000 for him to be incarcerated not the tax payors. My husband does not need anymore schooling he has been through college and then some. The parole board requires a special class that has to be taken before realese. He has tried for the past year to get into this class and they do not have enough teachers to teach these classes. Why spend our tax dollars after the first year if the state can't accomadate these classes? Why not give them their parole if they are eligible and make the class a parole requirement after they have been realesed at the prisoners exspence. Maybe you need to brush up on the prison system before you come in here talking like you know what is going on. if this bill passes it will save the state lots of money. If they earn it let them go. If you had a family member in this situation you would stand behind the way we all feel about this bill.
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