There is no rehabilitation of offenders

Discussion in 'Politics' started by PAPA ROACH, Aug 28, 2009.

  1. you just did
    ******


    It was your incoherent rambling disjointed post that I was referring to, which was nutty and amusing, not your views on sex offenders that I was making a comment on.

    Your follow up post was also rambling and disjointed but not amusing at all, still nutty though if that makes you feel better.

    ramble on
     
    #31     Sep 3, 2009
  2. And yet another one, MOTHERFUCKER!

    Cops Find 6 Bodies at Rapist's House
    He's arrested as search in Cleveland continuesBy John Johnson| Posted Oct 31, 09 3:27 PM CDT| Share (Newser) – Cleveland police have arrested a convicted rapist and discovered the remains of six bodies in and around his house. They're asking relatives of missing persons to bring them anything with DNA evidence to help identify the victims, reports the Plain Dealer. Anthony Sowell, 50, has lived at the house since 2005, when he was released from prison after serving 15 years for rape.

    "He apparently is a serial rapist," a police spokesman tells CNN. Police found the first two bodies yesterday hidden on the third floor when they went to Sowell's house to charge him with an unrelated rape. Subsequent searches turned up others in the basement, crawl space, and in a shallow grave outside. They're still searching for more.
     
    #32     Nov 1, 2009
  3. g222

    g222

    Quote from papa roach:

    Absolutely A-fucking-mazing!!!!!!!!!

    Then I see on one of those reality cop shows how some guy in Texas gets put on death for a rape/murder, the death sentence gets commuted to life by the Supreme Court after the ACLU wines about cruel and abusive punishment ... then after more wining by the ACLU about prison overcrouding, Texas starts releasing cons ... first all the non-violent types ... but the prisons are still too over-populated ... so then comes, er, goes the violent ones ... including this former death row resident. So surprise, surprise ... being the good, upstanding rapist/murderer that he was, this guy goes out and rapes and kills another 5 women!!!

    Now I'm thinking to myself ... 'self, when our dear forefathers wrote in this thing about cruel and abusive punishment, were they thinking about 100 lashes and the rack for thieves, drunkards and those who couldn't pay the king's taxes, or were they thinking about making sure that these cold-blooded, perverted killing machines had it as comfy as possible whilst serving their few years as a guest of the state - air conditioning and color TV notwithstanding?' I wonder what these colonial day dudes did with colonial day perverts anyway??? Let me guess ...
     
    #33     Nov 2, 2009
  4. I agree with many of the other posts, but this one the most.

    By calling a harmless guy like me who was busted buying drugs for a personal use an <b>'offender'</b> and assigning me a P.O. who should be out there keeping an eye on real criminals... <b>you completely dilute the entire meaning of the word 'offender'.</b>

    To get tough on (real) crime, you must first determine the entire purpose of the U.S. penal system. If the whole thing is just designed to entrap and enslave harmless, decent citizens- well, how can you NOT grant the inmates humane treatment, cable TV, and early releases? After all, these are people who don't belong in the system to begin with.

    To return the penal system to its pre-drug prohibition toughness, you must first release all the harmless post-drug prohibition political prisoners. If only the true monsters would remain behind bars, the entire 'sympathy' obstacle to good 'ol fashioned punishment would instantly evaporate.

    <img src=http://www.november.org/graphs/FedbyOffense.gif>

    BTW, federal P.O.'s STILL don't bother checking backyards during home visits. I would know.
     
    #34     Nov 2, 2009
  5. g222

    g222

    Quote from Reardon Metal:


    A salute!!!!

    I appologize for not recalling more of the details of that story mentioned above, but the sad thing was that in complying with the Supreme Court order, Texas DID start releasing all of those convicted of all lesser 'crimes' - including those shafted as mentioned by RM. Even after all those releases, the Texas prisons were still deemed to be overcrouded and therefore subjecting the remaining violent fuckers to 'cruel and unusual' punishment - thanks again to the aclu. That these pompous asses dictate the interpretation of the mindsets of the authors of our Constitution to an extent that has resulted in the concern for the rights of the most violent amoung us over and above the safety and rights the rest of us is indeed criminal.
     
    #35     Nov 2, 2009
  6. THIS is what I'm talking about!!!!! He will not be "rehabilitated" and released to do it again, problem solved.


    Saudi court upholds child rapist crucifixion ruling
    Tue Nov 3, 2009 2:22pm IST Email | Print | Share| Single Page[-] Text [+] RIYADH (Reuters) - A Saudi court of cassation upheld a ruling to behead and crucify a 22-year-old man convicted of raping five children and leaving one of them to die in the desert, newspapers reported on Tuesday.

    The convict was arrested earlier this year after a seven-year old boy helped police in their investigation. The child left in the desert after the rape was three years old, Okaz newspaper said.

    International rights groups have accused the kingdom, the birthplace of Islam, of applying draconian justice, beheading murderers, rapists and drug traffickers in public. So far this year about 40 people have been executed in Saudi Arabia.

    In Saudi Arabia, crucifixion means tying the body of the convict to wooden beams to be displayed to the public after beheading.

    (Reporting by Souhail Karam; editing by Inal Ersan)


    Fuck the International rights pussies, when one chooses to commit crimes as such, they have no rights as they have stripped the rights from their victims.
     
    #36     Nov 3, 2009
  7. g222

    g222

    quote from Papa Roach:

    YEA ... ah saya ... YEA-YA!!!!!
     
    #37     Nov 3, 2009
  8. Ricter

    Ricter

    Actually, liberals have typically supported this position instead of the death penalty.
     
    #38     Nov 3, 2009
  9. update of what our rehabilitated rapist has done- 11 bodies and counting.

    CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Police have discovered four bodies and the remains of a fifth this afternoon at the home of Anthony Sowell, bringing the total body count to 11.

    Sowell's home on Imperial Avenue now ranks among the deadliest crime scenes in Cleveland history.

    Sowell, 50, was charged with five counts of aggravated murder even as workers continued finding more bodies in his back yard.

    A heated tent is being installed in the back yard so crews can work through the night.

    Police, coroner and fire personnel are at the home, along with a dump truck.

    Police have scheduled a news conference for 6 p.m. Crews started digging this afternoon, two days after they had stopped searching for bodies.

    Sowell is being held on suspicion of murder after police found six decomposing bodies in his home. The bodies were scattered througout the home, including buried in a shallow grave in the basement, in crawl spaces and left in the home.

    A search warrant obtained over the weekend gave police permission take apart the home brick by brick if necessary, police sources said.
     
    #39     Nov 4, 2009
  10. this story is a broken record!

    http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&s...ex offender charged&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wn

    RALEIGH (WTVD) -- A convicted sex offender is facing new charges that he raped a woman at knifepoint.
    Eyewitness News has learned that 33-year-old Donald Currin has a long history of sex crime arrests.
    Time after time, he's been arrested for crimes ranging from breaking and entering to assault, kidnapping and indecent liberties with a minor -18 arrests in all, dating back to when he was 16 years old.
    According to police, Currin met a woman on South Saunders Street in Raleigh when she asked for a ride.
    Story continues below
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    But instead of taking her where she wanted to go, investigators say he took her to a construction site in a south Raleigh subdivision.
    Roger Bryant and his wife live right next to the construction site where the victim says she was raped at knifepoint.
    The Bryant's say they were surprised to hear that although Currin spent four months in prison for a probation violation, he received only probation for a more recent conviction in which he plead guilty to kidnapping a minor.
    The original charges in that incident were kidnapping and indecent liberties with a minor.
    "It's good for the city, it's good for the county to get people like that off the street," Bryant said. "And certainly if he hadn't had that victim he was looking for a victim."
    Raleigh police say they are looking at other similar unsolved crimes to see if Currin might be a suspect.
    Currin is being held under a $1 million bond in the Wake County Jail.
    If convicted of the rape and sex offense he's charged with now, he could be in prison for the rest of his life.
     
    #40     Nov 4, 2009