To: nickcarraway
Pent-up demand, just playing catch-up.
The rate will slow down in a few weeks, just as soon as some tame judge can issue an injunction against any further executions.
But right now the window is open.
2 posted on
06/21/2014 1:33:56 AM PDT by
alloysteel
(Selective and willful ignorance spells doom, to both victim and perpetrator - mostly the perp.)
To: nickcarraway
Pendergast sang about it; “Turn Out The Lights, and Light A Candle”.
To: nickcarraway
Always such a nice touch when the creep apologizes. Apparently no word on whether or not the other two creeps apologized?
4 posted on
06/21/2014 2:19:12 AM PDT by
RushLake
(Nothing can bring you peace but the triumph of principles. (Emerson))
To: nickcarraway
5 posted on
06/21/2014 2:44:15 AM PDT by
Cowboy Bob
(They are called "Liberals" because the word "parasite" was already taken.)
To: nickcarraway
Need to clean out death row, need the room for so many more, at three a day it would probably take a year or two.
Go Florida!!!
6 posted on
06/21/2014 3:03:21 AM PDT by
PoloSec
( Believe the Gospel: how that Christ died for our sins, was buried and rose again)
To: nickcarraway
i’ll go for the trifecta Alex....
7 posted on
06/21/2014 3:19:27 AM PDT by
njslim
(T)
To: nickcarraway
“Florida on Wednesday executed a Tampa-area man who murdered his estranged wife and her young son in 1985, two years after he had been paroled for killing his previous spouse”
One of the arguments against the death penalty is that an innocent person may be executed. First, no “innocent” person has ever been executed for the simple reason in our justice system your guilt or innocent has nothing to do with it. If a jury finds you innocent you can walk away a free man even when the evidence is overwhelming of your guilt. So the reverse must be true, if a jury finds you guilty then by definition you are guilty. It may not be fair, or right, but that is our justice system. Truth is secondary to the process.
However, even if an “innocent” person has been executed, I believe that more innocent people have been murdered by those that have once been convicted of murder, but for some reason released/escaped from prison, than “innocent” people been executed. This man’s case is an example, one of many. Executing murderers is the only sure way they will not kill again.
Life in prison without parole (as if that really exist) is more cruel and unusual then the death penalty.
As a side note, kidnapping was once a major problem in this nation until the FBI got involved and kidnappers were executed. The man that kidnapped Lindbergh’s baby and killed him, was arrested, tried, found guilty, supreme court ruled on the appeal and was executed within two years.
Since the death penalty is allowed in our constitution, the Supreme Court can not simply rule it unconstitutional, but they can (and have) muddy the water so much every case must be examined and re-examined until it takes years to finally provide the victims justice.
9 posted on
06/21/2014 3:51:05 AM PDT by
CIB-173RDABN
(I do not doubt that our climate changes. I only doubt that anything man does has any effect.)
To: nickcarraway
Coming soon to treacherous IRS agents that committed crimes against the Republic
12 posted on
06/21/2014 5:15:38 AM PDT by
bert
((K.E. N.P. N.C. +12 ..... Obama is public enemy #1)
To: nickcarraway
1985 - 2014 = 29 years.
I am not a fan of the death penalty but, 29 years is too damn long. Too long for the victim’s family to go through multiple appeals. And too long for the killer to await his fate.
If we are to have the death penalty, then the sentence should be carried out within no more than 5 years after conviction. Carried out soon enough that the public can even remember the crime. 29 years, 29 years. Shaking my head.
13 posted on
06/21/2014 5:24:29 AM PDT by
Tupelo
(I feel more like Philip Nolan every day)
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