Posted on 02/01/2004 6:36:45 PM PST by Russian Sage
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:55:57 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
TILLERY, N.C. -- Does the punishment fit the crime? That is the underlying question in our legal system. The answer to that question has changed over time.
In 1970, a day laborer named Junior Allen was given a life sentence for a crime he would likely get probation for today.
(Excerpt) Read more at wral.com ...
you want to personalize everything
Idiotic. Not supported by anything I've said. Not once have I used an ad hominem. You're posts are full of them.
have you tried that experiment of breaking into a couple of houses yet? Is it safe? Safe for you? Safe for the victims?
No. I've never been a criminal and have never wanted to be one. How is this relevant...and aren't you getting personal?
Just a side issue, for you to vent your envy of people who have money--even if it's only stolen money.
Even? Pretty casual attitude for a man who claims to be concerned with crime and punishment?...and where do you get the idea that I envy these people?
You seem to envy almost everyone
Really? What's your evidence for such a claim?
If it aggravates you that the white collar criminals didn't get as much time as your dear small-time loser, all I can do is laugh. Life's a beach, isn't it? But you haven't told me whose house, whose physical safety zone, those white-collar guys breached in their thefts
Life's a beach that these guys can steal millions and get no punishment while small-time losers get life for stealing a TV? Only to another crook. How did they breach anyone's physical safety? Well, I've read that quite a few people lost everything as a result of these white-collar crimes. I leave it to you to imagine what followed.
And as if to prove my point, you appear eager to emulate the Enron crooks, but you timidly avoid emulating your hero from this article
I do, huh. You must be great fun socially if you draw conclusions like that.
The Supreme Court in 1971 found that the State couldn't even prove the house was occupied at the time of the crime. Do you know what that means? Think about it. Why was it so difficult? And if he assaulted her why wasn't she seriously injured? Why didn't she require hospitalization? An 87 year-old woman fought with a young physical laborer and didn't suffer serious injury? Almost impossible.
The most probably conclusion to draw from all this is that there was no confrontation and the house was unoccupied. Rather than do that you go to incredible lengths to justify the punishment.
Why?
I remember that crime got a lot worse during and following the Viet Nam war - a normal occurance, as history and current events make clear. I also think population pressures and enormous immigration have aggravated the situation.
It's true that "many 'crimes' and resultant punishments never processed through lawyers and judges" - and that mostly resulted in great injustice (something you neglect to mention but are surely aware of).
And
There's an elephant in the room which everyone sees but pretends not to see - Race. A difficult subject. Liberals maximize its influence while conservatives minimize. But its influence is real and relevant.
I don't know the modern south, and in the old south rape by a bum of any color was treated very harshly (although Faulkner, Tennessee Williams, and others had quite a few unflattering things to say about that culture, and they knew it damned well). But I know for sure that race played a role in the administration of "justice" and still plays a role.
What that role is cannot be determined without looking at the particulars of each case. In Los Angeles, Rodney King turned out to be a bum who got just what he deserved. Junior Allen seems to have been a bum who was punished far beyond what he deserved - probably due to prejudice.
More generally, blacks commit crimes far beyond their numbers, and achieve far less than their numbers, but DWB (driving while black) is a real phenomenon and not something they, or liberals, invented. I leave it to you to tell me why white collar criminals - overwhelmingly of the white race - are so leniently punished.
Are they actual true memories or LSD induced?
Now, now. If you want to be treated like a lady you must act like one.
Exactly what I thought.
Hard to believe such things are happening. Repeated observations of this kind of behavior are probably what motivated Orwell and Kafka.
Apparently the Parole Board is permitted to review all of the evidence in the case, including police reports and the like. There is an awful lot of evidence gathered that never gets presented at trial. It looks like the evidence of the beating was not presented in this case.
Now, why would the Prosecution not present evidence of a beating if a beating actually took place? Well, if the Prosecution cannot prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the beating took place, then they will not present it at trial, because one doubtful element would throw doubt on the entire case. So, for instance, if a thief was caught with the goods and his fingerprints were all over the house, it is easy to prove that he broke in and stole. If the woman is battered but not severely injured, and there is no physical evidence of her injuries, and she can't prove she was at home in the middle of the night, the assault element comes down to the statement of one uncorroborated witness.
So, if you happen to live alone, were you home last night, at Midnight? Can you prove you were home? Anybody see you there, did you make any phone calls? How could this woman prove that she was assaulted, when she could not even prove that she was home?
But in North Carolina the Parole Board, apparently, is not limited to facts presented at trial. Rather, it seems that they look at the totality of evidence and the prisoners actions in while incarcerated in order to come up with their decision. Given the totality of evidence before them, it is hard to quibble with the result.
You obviously have never been in a correctional facility, and know even less about prisons or you would have never made such a cavalier and uninformed statement. I am not a member of the "hug a thug" club by a long shot, but what you suggest is both unfeasible and dangerous, to both staff and inmates. Now as regards this prisoner he shouldn't be out. His disciplinary record and ability to conform to societal rules according to other sources is shaky. He would most likely reoffend . If you feel Prisoners are coddled(and in many ways they are) fine , lets talk about changing that. But, please don't fall back on the tired "lock em up and throw away the key, that'll learn em!" argument. It doesn't help, and HAS gotten prison cops (like me btw) injured and killed. I'm touchy about that, go figure
Slainte,
CC
Now who's assuming facts not in evidence? Or are we to assume that everybody South of the Mason/Dixon line is a seething racist redneck?
Is that so? And who was responsible for the following posts? Three guesses?
He is a loudmouth, typical hater, an ambitious little attorney, and he is talking out his ass
You wouldn't trust them if I DID bring them to your lazy, argumentative, discontented, angry little door
Or would you be wanting that person to be prosecuted so that he would not do that again? (I don't expect an honest answer.)
apparently you have trouble with abstract thinking
Just a side issue, for you to vent your envy of people who have money--even if it's only stolen money. You seem to envy almost everyone. I think you're intimidated by, or envious of, everyone who is not a total loser as this imprisoned man is
And as if to prove my point, you appear eager to emulate the Enron crooks, but you timidly avoid emulating your hero from this article
Any clue? Hmmmm.... :)
As I said I think you're crazy and have no understanding of what you're saying, let alone of what others are saying.
On the question of whether the woman was beaten, or even at home, at the time of the crime.
According to the state Department of Correction's official record of the crime , Johnston County sheriff's deputy J.D. Stewart reported that Johnson was home at the time, and she and Allen scuffled. "She was somewhat injured; bruises and scrapes, but nothing serious," the report states.
If the woman had been home and beaten the first thing she would have done is call her relatives, who would have rushed over, and then called the police...or taken her to the hospital and then called the police
I've served on juries. Most jurors are reasonable people. They would have accepted the above without question. So why didn't the prosecution present it? You say the woman couldn't prove she was at home. Why not? No jury would have trouble believing that an 87 year old woman usually sleeps in her own bed. Obviously, there's a lot more to this story and we don't know what that is.
Selma lawyer Ken Hinton , who represented Allen at trial in October 1970, recalled similar facts. "It seems to me like the woman might have been beaten," he said. "That may be why the judge gave him all that time."
Might have been? May be? What kind of evidence is that and how did he know?
On the question of whether the punishment fit the crime.
The state sentencing law later was changed, but was not made retroactive. The maximum prison sentence now for second-degree burglary -- in the third-lowest level of 10 classes of felonies -- is three years. Even assuming that Allen accosted Johnson, the longest prison sentence he could get under current law for the most likely charges, burglary and robbery , would be six years.
At the time, a life sentence didn't necessarily mean life, as it does now. It meant, in Allen's case, that he became eligible for parole after about 7 1/2 years in prison. That's when the rejections began,
Allen hasn't been a model prisoner. Just how bad he is, that's the question. Quite bad, the parole commission says. Not too bad, his jailers say
Is there any question? The law was unjust from the beginning. It was changed but the changes were not made retroactive. The sentencing judge seems to have had 7 1/2 years in mind conditional upon rehabilitation. The parole boards probably belong in prison themselves.
There's a larger question however. This guy was a loser. No education, no skills, violent temperament, predilection for crime. Should people be incarcerated or killed for such things? If so, then the state should and must be consistant in the admininistration of such punishment and it is not. For example, those with multiple DUIs should be given life terms or killed. Are they?
Who indeed?
In context one can clearly see that my remarks were confined to this particular case.
How is the Parole Board to determine if the condition of rehabilitation has been met? They look at the record. The record includes information of the assault and the fact that this inmate has continued to break the rules while in prison. Does that sound like rehabilitation to you?
As to why the information regarding the assault was not presented at trial, it appears that under the previous law in North Carolina a conviction for burglary was as good as one for burglary with assault, since the assault could be considered by the Parole Board at the appropriate time. If this had not been the case, perhaps the Prosecution would have gone for the greater charge, instead of settling for the "slam-dunk" on burglary and theft. But these "what-ifs" are ultimately unknowable.
But the fact of the matter is that the Parole Board is permitted to come to a reasonable conclusion regarding the assault based on the information before them, and has concluded that the assault took place. Based on that, and this prisoner's record since then, they seem to be making the right call.
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