Professor Yaffle
Butterbeans and Breadcrumbs
Well let's just say if he was released, I would want him under close supervision.
I thought Pete Sutcliffe was one of the original Beatles....
And there was that point about him being liable to be lynched, that someone was making on breakfast radio this morning.
Rolfe.
I never saw any sense in imposing more than one "life" sentence.
Assuming life is 70 years, 20 life sentences, bu my arithmetic equates to 1400 years.
That puts his release date in 3381.
Let him out then.
That's something that's always puzzled me slightly; in the UK, sentences usually (always?) run concurrently, whereas in the US I think they often (always?) run consecutively. For some reason, I've perhaps unthinkingly felt that the UK system is fairer, in that there is usually the prospect of being released eventually, which can disappear quite quickly under the US system with a handful of offences.
Where an offender is sentenced to imprisonment for more than one offence, the sentences may be ordered by the court to run either consecutively or concurrently. There are a number of factors which a court will take into account when deciding whether sentences should be consecutive or concurrent. Consecutive sentences will generally be appropriate, for example, where different types of offending behaviour are involved.
It emphasised that, in general, consecutive sentences should be avoided where they include extended sentences and/or imprisonment for public protection. Wherever possible, concurrent sentences should be imposed with the period in custody adjusted to reflect the overall criminality of the offender.
Multiple life sentences may mean you're less likely to be released on licence in the UK, but how does that equate to the US system? If say you get 340 years in America, is there any likelihood you'll ever see daylight again?
Something to consider: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/merseyside/8546528.stm
The Ministry of Justice said: "We can confirm that Jon Venables has been recalled to custody following a breach of licence conditions."
Details of the nature of the breach were not released.
Lest we forget, this was a time when the police could get away with casually differentiating between his 'innocent' victims and those who worked as prostitutes, I am unsure as to whether this attitude was shared by the judiciary.I'm not really clear what the highlighted part entails, since--absent new evidence--the gravity of the crimes should have been adequately considered first time round.
At the time of his trial there was some discussion about his sanity. It was a bit of a Catch 22 - nobody who did what he did could be called sane, surely? However, he was tried for murder (not manslaughter) and considered to be sane at the time.
No, there isn't. That's kind of the point of it.
What I find suprising is that both of them aren't back in prison. Considering how horrible that crime was, how young they still are now, it seemed inevitable.
How do folks in the UK put up with vagness, such as:
Doesn't the public have the right to know if he murdered another child (in your community) or it was just public drunkenness?
Fair point but there is a well established principle that changes in laws or enforcement / judicial processes don't reach into the past to re-evaluate it.Lest we forget, this was a time when the police could get away with casually differentiating between his 'innocent' victims and those who worked as prostitutes, I am unsure as to whether this attitude was shared by the judiciary.
Doesn't the public have the right to know if he murdered another child (in your community) or it was just public drunkenness?