Schrodinger's Cat
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2010
- Messages
- 3,456
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Honestly, I just think you're lacking a skeptical approach to the justice system. You seem to honestly believe that these things just work themselves out. That if there's evidence that you're wrongly convicted, a judge will just throw out your case and you're free to go. That's just not the way it works. Cases don't get thrown out nearly as easily as you seem to think they are.
An example of this is the "repressed memory" cases of the 80s and 90s. It had become popular for psychotherapists to use hypnosis and drugs to get patients to remember forgotten "repressed memories." This often resulted from a patient presenting to a therapist with symptoms, which could be symptoms of sexual assault. The therapist would then assume that sexual assault was the root cause, and try and lead the patient to remember said assault. The problem was there are plenty of mental health ailments which can result from sexual assault, but can also arise outside of sexual assault. A big example of this is eating disorders.
But the repressed memory therapy was debunked and discredited. Studies on the subject could find absolutely no evidence that people who had been traumatized were able to simply wipe these memories completely from their brain, then able to recall it under hypnosis or drugs. It was also show that repressed memory therapy could easily result in planting false memories into patients, making them believe abuse had occured when none had.
Parents, teachers, etc, were jailed during this time period based only on testimony of victims while undergoing repressed memory therapy. When repressed memory therapy was debunked, yes, some of these cases were overturned and the accused set free. Some even then sued the original therapists who responsible for their convictions. But some were not. There are still people, mostly men, in jail for decades based only on information obtained while under since debunked therapy sessions, with no corroberating evidence.
Your belief that if you are falsely accused and there is no actual evidence against you, you won't be convicted, or if you are, you'll be set free, is a lovely story that sometimes does happen, but "a jury found them guilty and a judge didn't throw out the case" is not evidence to me that they did it. ACTUAL evidence that they did it is evidence to me. So far the only reasoning you are able to provide is that "other people think they did it" which is not actually evidence.
As for the "satanic panic" you're right, this was in 1993, not the 80s when the satanic panic was at its height. But I think the label still applies considering that the main argument for why they were guilty was satanists committed the murder, and these kids wore black, so they must be satanists.
Oh - well yeah, that's all I mentioned so I do see the problem. There's also being convicted by a jury. Now granted, sometimes juries wrongly convict; but a judge didn't throw out this case and another jury never reversed the verdict. So, they were convicted, then released from jail on a guilty plea. That's a whole lot of "guilty" flying around.
ETA: This wasn't a satanic-panic case. This was, what, '95? '96?
Honestly, I just think you're lacking a skeptical approach to the justice system. You seem to honestly believe that these things just work themselves out. That if there's evidence that you're wrongly convicted, a judge will just throw out your case and you're free to go. That's just not the way it works. Cases don't get thrown out nearly as easily as you seem to think they are.
An example of this is the "repressed memory" cases of the 80s and 90s. It had become popular for psychotherapists to use hypnosis and drugs to get patients to remember forgotten "repressed memories." This often resulted from a patient presenting to a therapist with symptoms, which could be symptoms of sexual assault. The therapist would then assume that sexual assault was the root cause, and try and lead the patient to remember said assault. The problem was there are plenty of mental health ailments which can result from sexual assault, but can also arise outside of sexual assault. A big example of this is eating disorders.
But the repressed memory therapy was debunked and discredited. Studies on the subject could find absolutely no evidence that people who had been traumatized were able to simply wipe these memories completely from their brain, then able to recall it under hypnosis or drugs. It was also show that repressed memory therapy could easily result in planting false memories into patients, making them believe abuse had occured when none had.
Parents, teachers, etc, were jailed during this time period based only on testimony of victims while undergoing repressed memory therapy. When repressed memory therapy was debunked, yes, some of these cases were overturned and the accused set free. Some even then sued the original therapists who responsible for their convictions. But some were not. There are still people, mostly men, in jail for decades based only on information obtained while under since debunked therapy sessions, with no corroberating evidence.
Your belief that if you are falsely accused and there is no actual evidence against you, you won't be convicted, or if you are, you'll be set free, is a lovely story that sometimes does happen, but "a jury found them guilty and a judge didn't throw out the case" is not evidence to me that they did it. ACTUAL evidence that they did it is evidence to me. So far the only reasoning you are able to provide is that "other people think they did it" which is not actually evidence.
As for the "satanic panic" you're right, this was in 1993, not the 80s when the satanic panic was at its height. But I think the label still applies considering that the main argument for why they were guilty was satanists committed the murder, and these kids wore black, so they must be satanists.
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