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To: radioman
Crime and punishment debates are endless.

Yes, although they are by no means alone in that regard, and that doesn't mean they are unworthy of pursuing.

Before three strikes, if you awoke to find a burglar in your home the guy would run. He knows the odds are that you won't be able to identify him.

Now, he won't take that chance and is going to kill you.

Therefore, we should soften the laws so that criminals won't kill us. Is that a fair interpretation?

10 posted on 01/15/2003 12:11:00 PM PST by Imal (If Crimes Were Outlawed, Only Outlaws Would Do Crimes)
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To: All
The Criminal Life of Richard Allen Davis When Polly Klass was murdered, a heart breaking cry was heard around the nation. When we learned the man who tortured her, then killed her was a career criminal, those cries turned to anger. How was this man allowed to walk free for any length of time? How was he allowed to slip in and out of the judicial systems hands? How was it possible that this man, this monster, was allowed to be free on the night that he kidnapped and murdered Polly Klaas? Richard Allen Davis' criminal record would begin in 1967 and continue until he viciously killed Polly Klaas. Here is Richard Allen Davis' life of crime.

March 6, 1967:
At age 12, Davis has his first contact with law enforcement when he was arrested for burglary in Chowchilla, where he lived with his grandmother.

May 24, 1967:
Arrested again for forging a $10 money order. He was briefly in Juvenile Hall before his father moved him and his siblings to La Honda.

Nov. 15, 1969:
Arrested for the burglary of a La Honda home.

Nov. 16, 1969:
The first of several occasions when Davis' father turns Davis and his older brother over to juvenile authorities for ``incorrigibility.''

September 15, 1970:
Arrested for participating in a motorcycle theft. A probation officer and judge accept his father's suggestion that he enlist in the Army to avoid being sent to the California Youth Authority.

July 1971:
Entered the Army. His military record reflects several infractions for AWOL, fighting, failure to report and morphine use.

Aug. 1972:
General discharge from the military.

Feb. 12, 1973:
Arrested in Redwood City for public drunkenness and resisting arrest. Placed on one-year summary probation.

April 21, 1973:
Arrested in Redwood City for being a minor in possession of liquor, burglary and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Charged with trespassing, later dismissed.

Aug. 13, 1973:
Arrested in Redwood City leaning against hedges extremely intoxicated. Released when he was sober.

Oct. 24, 1973:
Arrested in Redwood City on traffic warrants. Between April and October, he was implicated in more than 20 La Honda burglaries, leading a probation officer to report that residents were so angry at him, he might be in danger if he returned to La Honda. He pleaded guilty to burglary and was sentenced to six months in county jail and placed on three-years probation.

May 13, 1974:
Arrested for burglarizing South San Francisco High School. He is sent to the California Medical Facility, Vacaville, for a 90-diagnostic study. A county probation officer recommends prison, but proceedings are suspended when Davis enrolls in a Veterans Administration alcohol treatment program. He quits on the second day.

Sept. 16, 1974:
Sentenced to one year in county jail for the school burglary. He was allowed to leave jail to attend a Native American drug and alcohol treatment program. He failed to return, leaving behind two angry fellow inmates who had given Davis money to buy drugs and bring the contraband back to jail.

March 2, 1975:
After being released, the two inmates tracked Davis down and shot him in the back. He is rearrested on a probation violation for failing to return to jail. Later, he testified against the inmates, earning him the epithet of ``snitch'' from fellow inmates. He was placed in protective custody.

April 11, 1975:
Arrested for parole violation.

July 11, 1975:
Arrested for auto theft and possession of marijuana. Received 10-day jail sentence.

Aug. 13, 1975:
Probation revoked after arrest for San Francisco burglary and grand theft. He was sentenced to a term of from six months to 15 years in prison.

Aug. 2, 1976:
Paroled from Vacaville.

Sept. 24, 1976:
Abducted Frances Mays, a 26-year-old legal secretary, from the South Hayward BART station and attempted to sexually assault her. She escaped, hailed a passing car, in which California Highway Patrol Officer Jim Wentz was riding. Wentz arrested Davis.

Dec. 8, 1976:
Transferred to Napa State Hospital for psychiatric evaluation after he tried to hang himself in a cell at Alameda County Jail. He later admitted he faked the suicide attempt in order to be sent to a state hospital, where he could more easily escape. He was mistakenly admitted as a voluntarily patient rather than a prisoner.

Dec. 16, 1976:
Escaped from Napa State Hospital to went on a four-day crime spree in Napa. He broke into the home of Marjorie Mitchell, a nurse at the state hospital, and beat her on the head with a fire poker while she slept. He broke into the Napa County animal shelter and stole a shotgun. He used the shotgun to try to kidnap Hazel Frost, a bartender, as she climbed into her Cadillac outside a bar. When she saw he had bindings, she rolled out of the car, grabbed a gun from beneath the seat and fired six shots at the fleeing Davis.

Dec. 21, 1976:
Broke into the home of Josephine Kreiger, a bank employee, in La Honda. He was arrested by a San Mateo County sheriff's deputy hiding in brush behind the home with a shotgun.

June 1, 1977:
Sentenced to a term of one to 25 years in prison for the Mays kidnapping. A sexual assault charged is dropped as part of a plea bargain. He is later sentenced to concurrent terms for the Napa crime spree and the La Honda break-in.

March 4, 1982:
Paroled from the Deuel Vocational Institute in Tracy.

Nov. 30, 1984:
With new girlfriend-accomplice Sue Edwards, he pistol-whipped Selina Varich, a friend of Edwards' sister, in her Redwood City apartment and forced her to withdraw $6,000 from her bank account. Davis and Edwards make a successful escape.

March 22, 1985:
Arrested in Modesto when a police officer noticed a defective taillight. He and Edwards were charged with robbing a Yogurt Cup shop and the Delta National Bank in Modesto. Authorities in Kenniwick, Wash., were unaware for several years that the pair had robbed a bank, a Value Giant store and the Red Steer restaurant during the winter of 1984-85. Davis later confessed to the crimes in an attempt to implicate Edwards, whom he believed to have welched on a promise to help him while he was in prison.

June 27, 1993:
Paroled from the California Men's Colony, San Luis Obispo, after serving half of a 16-year sentence for the Varich kidnapping.

Oct. 1, 1993:
Davis kidnapped Polly Klaas during a slumber party at her Petaluma home and murdered her.

Oct. 19, 1993:
Arrested in Ukiah for drunken driving during the search for Polly. He failed to appear in court.

Nov. 30, 1993:
Arrested for parole violation on the Coyote Valley Indian reservation north of Ukiah, he is identified as the prime suspect in the kidnapping.

Dec. 4, 1993:
Davis provides investigators with information that leads them to Polly's body off Highway 101 near Cloverdale.

Dec. 7, 1993:
Charged with the kidnap-murder of Polly.

June 18, 1996:
Convicted of kidnap-murder of Polly.

August 5, 1996:
Superior Court jury in San Jose recommends death sentence.

Source: Sonoma County district attorney's office, court records, trial testimony.

11 posted on 01/15/2003 12:20:42 PM PST by mbynack
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To: Imal
Therefore, we should soften the laws so that criminals won't kill us. Is that a fair interpretation?

Hmmm...No. We should have a few strong laws instead of many weak ones.
If you are going to keep releasing dangerous criminals to make room for non violent drug offenders, violent crime will increase. Three strikes has sent harmless people off to crime college, and that's a fact.
Here in Califruitia, we locked up a bicycle theif for life while releasing a killer.

When the state becomes the protector of public safety, we lose freedom and safety.
We don't need loophole laws to protect us from predators. We need men who are willing to do what a man has gotta do.

The death penalty was not put in place to punish or prevent. The death penalty is to keep the peace. Lynch mobs had a bad habit of destroying jails.
I think all laws have to be looked at in the same light.
23 posted on 01/22/2003 9:43:30 AM PST by radioman
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