Posted on 06/16/2010 12:41:24 AM PDT by stillafreemind
The sick saga of Darrell McNeill and Aaron Vargas began when Vargas was 11 years old. That's when Darrell McNeill started molesting Vargas. McNeill continued to stalk Aaron Vargas for the rest of his life. Tracking Vargas down when he moved, finding his work places, calling him at home a dozen times a day, Vargas could not escape his molester.
(Excerpt) Read more at associatedcontent.com ...
Not a bad call, he’ll be out in a few years and he’s
not sniveling about it.
The governor should commute his sentence. That man needed a killing.
People are irrelevent. Molestation, self-defense, even the difference between killing and murder - all irrelevent.
This was not a common law ruling, it was an administrative law ruling based on statutory law - which is based on commercial law.
And under commercial law, a taxpaying unit has been destroyed, and that loss has harmed the state. The cause of the destruction of that taxpaying unit must therefore be punished.
That the destroyed taxpaying unit was a merciless predator molestor rapist who deserved to be hunted down with torches and pitchforks is so completely irrelevent to the judge, he probably couldn’t keep from laughing.
Stupid slaves, arguing yet again about “rights” and “justice” in court. To the government, it’s like an oil pump or sparkplug arguing about being abused by the driver.
Poor judges, what they bear to keep civilization under control, nobody understands.
He’s going to be sodomised in prison, now, and probably released later as an even worse psychopath.
Contrary to the fantasies pushed by Hollyweirdos who dream of such things, prisons are not the rape-fests that the Hollyweird crowd portrays.
US: Federal Statistics Show Widespread Prison Rape
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2007/12/15/us-federal-statistics-show-widespread-prison-rape
New statistics compiled by a US Justice Department agency reveal that the rape and sexual abuse of prisoners by other prisoners and staff plague prisons nationwide, Human Rights Watch said today.
According to the report, released today by the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), Sexual Victimization in State and Federal Prisons Reported by Inmates, 2007, 4.5 percent of the state and federal prisoners surveyed reported sexual victimization in the past 12 months. Given a national prison population of 1,570,861, the BJS findings suggest that in one year alone more than 70,000 prisoners were sexually abused.
When nearly one in 20 prisoners reports being raped or sexually abused behind bars, it is clear that prison authorities are not doing enough to prevent these serious crimes, said Jamie Fellner, senior counsel of the US Program at Human Rights Watch.
Prison rape is not inevitable, but it is all too predictable when prison authorities fail to enforce a zero-tolerance policy on sexual abuse, noted Fellner, who also serves as a commissioner on the National Prison Rape Elimination Commission, created by Congress in 2003 as part of the National Prison Rape Elimination Act.
Some 2.1 percent of the inmates surveyed by the BJS reported sexual abuse involving another inmate. In its 2001 landmark report, No Escape: Male Rape in US Prisons, Human Rights Watch documented vicious and brutally violent male rapes in prison as well as other more common, less overtly violent forms of coerced sex. Certain prisoners are more vulnerable to rape and are targeted for sexual exploitation especially prisoners who are young, physically small or weak, gay, first offenders, or have been convicted of a sexual offense against a minor.
Human Rights Watchs research revealed that sexual abuse by other inmates often occurred because staff failed to adequately supervise inmates or respond appropriately to complaints of unwanted sexual activity. In some prisons, staff tacitly as well as explicitly condoned inmate-on-inmate abuse.
According to the BJS, five of the 10 prison facilities with the highest reported rates of inmate-on-inmate victimization are in Texas, with reported prevalence ranging from 3.3 to 8.8 percent. Texas has a crowded state prison system with a long and notorious history of prison violence, marked by staff indifference to and complicity with abuse, as documented in No Escape.
Texas officials insist they have put effective anti-rape strategies in place, but the Justice Department figures show that they still have a long way to go, Fellner said. Prison authorities in Texas must ensure that sexual abuse is not part of an inmates sentence.
Nationwide, a higher percentage of inmates, 2.9 percent, reported staff sexual misconduct than inmate-on-inmate abuse. A prison in Nebraska had the highest reported rate of staff-on-inmate sexual abuse, 12.2 percent. The BJS survey asked inmates to indicate whether their sexual activity with staff was willing or unwilling. In the prison context, however, this distinction is meaningless.
As Human Rights Watch documented in its 1996 report, All Too Familiar: Sexual Abuse of Women in State Prisons, all sexual interaction between staff and inmates is inherently coercive because of the inherent disparity in power between staff and inmates, and thus can never be considered voluntary on the part of the inmates. Human Rights Watch urges the BJS to eliminate reference to inmate willingness with regard to staff sexual misconduct in future reports.
We welcome the careful efforts by BJS to statistically capture sexual abuse in prisons, said Fellner. We look forward to their efforts to document sexual victimization in other facilities, including jails and youth detention centers.
Restraining order. Violate it and go to jail.
The article isn't well written, but implies an ongoing relationship between the two men somewhat more complex than that of stalker and stalkee.
Didn't McNeill also sexually abuse his own stepson? I know one of his victims comitted suicide, and was thinking it was his stepson.
You need to read the history of this story before commenting in such a flippant way. This pervert had even started showing up unsolicited and offering to babysit this man’s 6 month old daughter.
I think this case is so complicated that I may not have been able to sentence him as well. If the criminal justice system fails to protect someone then the person has only three options... die, stay a victim, or do what it takes to end the torment. If he had said he killed the man in order to protect his baby, would people be so willing to send him to prison?
Sick world, my FRiend.
According to the BJS, five of the 10 prison facilities with the highest reported rates of inmate-on-inmate victimization are in TexasIt should be noted that there is an enormous racial component to prison rape. It is overwhelmingly perpetratesd by blacks on whites.
Remember, those are self-reporting surveys, (inmates lie) and even on those self-reporting surveys, you are looking at a very small number, just as I pointed out. The BLS stats still don’t show the rape-fest that Hollyweirdos fantasize about. 4.5% is hardly “widespread.”
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