Posted on 10/13/2020 6:51:26 AM PDT by ChicagoConservative27
LANSING, Mich. (WILX) - Tomorrow is a day many convicted of small criminal charges have been waiting for. Tomorrow, Governor Gretchen Whitmer is expected to sign the Clean Slate bill.
The so-called Clean Slate bill passed in a 29-to-8 vote.
The bill, once signed, will erase a persons record seven to ten years after being convicted of certain charges like marijuana misdemeanors.
It doesnt apply to offenses that carry a prison sentence of ten years or more, including assault and human trafficking.
(Excerpt) Read more at wilx.com ...
Does it matter any more? They let people out of prison a few short years after they were convicted of murder. There are now laws that prohibit landlords from asking about a potential tenant’s criminal record. It goes on and on. They are determined to create chaos and release the criminal class against us.
Does the “Clean Slate” restore Second Amendment Constitutional rights? I didn’t think so.
It’s actually a good idea. The stopped clock was right for a minute.
Does the Clean Slate restore Second Amendment Constitutional rights? I didnt think so.
just remember... this bill was crated and passed by our wonderful gop controlled legislature... now someone tell me again the difference between republicans and democrats?
oh yeah, i forgot... republican is socialist, and democrat is communist
Yes, it’s pretty much a game. Most politicians have no principles at all.
If its just misdemeanors and nothing violent, and the person hasnt committed another offense during that time...
I dont have a problem with it.
Dont be so sure of that. Indianas expungement statute does restore 2nd amendment rights.
Once a conviction has been set aside by the state, the individual will not legally be considered to have been previously convicted of that crime. However, a conviction that is set aside can still be considered a prior conviction by courts, law enforcement agencies and attorneys for the purpose of charging an individual with a second or subsequent offense.
Since the ATF has been prohibited from expending funds to restore Second Amendment rights to ex-felons, and I don't think the "Clean Slate" bill removes an individual's felony conviction from the FBI database, I'm not sure if an 'expungement' can be appealed to the NICS system.
The criminal justice system does not instill trust into citizens. A lot of people do not think criminals have paid their debt to society which leads to exclusion from society in the most simple ways, like a decent job. We need to be insured that people do real time for real crimes and that reform has occurred. The flip side of that is when given that trust, we give people a real second chance.
This kind of legal reform is way overdue.
I’m just surprised to see Governor Lockdown signing it.
She and the other Democrats are legitimizing and arming Antifa/BLM types and other antisocial criminals to discourage police efforts and attack moral people. The best that police can do is to reestablish those criminal histories by busting the criminals again. The criminal histories give potential victims a fighting chance, when they must defend themselves.
My take as well. I have a family member that spent a year in prison for breaking a window in a school with a rock. He’s now an uber responsible person in his private life and job. That conviction was done by a vindictive small town judge anyway, and there is no reason this should even be on this guy’s record.
Small charges now, murder in a few years, because that’s the goal. A true leftist believes that the maximum sentence for any crime should be 14 years. And that’s only for adults, which they define as over 29 years. (Except for the purposes of voting and/or sex, in which case they define adult as 12).
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