Hmm.
Irony.
Irony.
"There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics." -- (maybe) Benjamin Disraeli, popularized by Mark Twain
And I will never agree with that sentiment. So I guess there is nowhere else to go with this discussion.GBear4Life said:
Dude, but that one crime is murder... there was no doubt in the case....if you are capable of committing murder, bye bye, it's a pity there isn't a hell for ya to go to
I thought that was pretty clear early on, but I think flushing out how our perspectives differ was the point.sycasey said:And I will never agree with that sentiment. So I guess there is nowhere else to go with this discussion.GBear4Life said:
Dude, but that one crime is murder... there was no doubt in the case....if you are capable of committing murder, bye bye, it's a pity there isn't a hell for ya to go to
GBear4Life said:
What's lacking is your ability to articulate what should the bar be for allowing convicted murderers or violent criminals the opportunity to overturn their conviction or sentences
GBear4Life said:
Seriously?
What's a lot of time served?
How can someone be a serial offender if they're convicted and sent to prison for life on their first offense? That's how you eliminate "serial" offenders -- you put them away .
Would you be okay if all the ex-murderers could conditionally be released but only if they live on your block?
Why did those questions bother yousycasey said:GBear4Life said:
Seriously?
What's a lot of time served?
How can someone be a serial offender if they're convicted and sent to prison for life on their first offense? That's how you eliminate "serial" offenders -- you put them away .
Would you be okay if all the ex-murderers could conditionally be released but only if they live on your block?
We're done here.
I'm pretty sure you're not serious about understanding mine or anyone else's perspective, just finding more reasons to browbeat.GBear4Life said:Why did those questions bother yousycasey said:GBear4Life said:
Seriously?
What's a lot of time served?
How can someone be a serial offender if they're convicted and sent to prison for life on their first offense? That's how you eliminate "serial" offenders -- you put them away .
Would you be okay if all the ex-murderers could conditionally be released but only if they live on your block?
We're done here.
I understand your perspective, I just find it objectionable and inconsistent with a rational perspective on ethical priorities and public policy -- and inconsistent with your own values. In the abstract you find it sensible and centered and compassionate to offer the worst among us redemption if they "make good" for some period of time.sycasey said:I'm pretty sure you're not serious about understanding mine or anyone else's perspective, just finding more reasons to browbeat.GBear4Life said:Why did those questions bother yousycasey said:GBear4Life said:
Seriously?
What's a lot of time served?
How can someone be a serial offender if they're convicted and sent to prison for life on their first offense? That's how you eliminate "serial" offenders -- you put them away .
Would you be okay if all the ex-murderers could conditionally be released but only if they live on your block?
We're done here.
Honestly, I was pretty sure of this from the start but I decided to give a little rope and see what happened. No more.
smart move if that is the case. Most life sentence that include parol are not life sentences in CA . They avarage around 25 to 30 years depending on which time periods you look at.sycasey said:I believe that's basically what he did for this guy. Despite what the clipped Twitter headline might have you believe, the guy is not free already. Newsom's action allows him to request parole when he otherwise would not have been able to.wifeisafurd said:
Newsom probably should have dumped the decisions on to parole boards with directions to reduce the jail population size due to COVID.
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-27/newsom-commutes-prison-sentences-including-for-murderQuote:
Rodney McNeal, 50, of San Bernardino County has served 22 years for fatally stabbing his pregnant wife, a crime he also denies.
The others include:
- Kristopher Blehm, 35, of Santa Barbara County, who has served nearly 12 years for helping murder his crime partner's romantic rival.
- Steven Bradley, 56, of Kern County, who has served 32 years for killing a gas station attendant during a robbery.
- Jason Bryant, 40, of Shasta County, who has served 20 years for armed robberies, including one in which a victim was fatally shot by an accomplice.
- Rosemary Dyer, 67, of Los Angeles County, who has served more than 33 years for fatally shooting her husband.
- Samuel Eldredge, 61, of Humboldt County, who has served 25 years for fatally shooting his crime partner's housemate.
- Richard Flowers, 64, of Tulare County, who has served more than 25 years for killing a woman during a robbery.
- Robert Glass, 48, of Los Angeles County, who has served more than 26 years for murder during a burglary.
- James Harris, 56, of Los Angeles County, who has served more than 30 years for a drug-sales-related kidnapping and the killing of two victims.
- David Jassy, 45, Los Angeles County, who has served 11 years for killing a man during an altercation.
- Shyrl Lamar, 68, of Sacramento County, who participated in a robbery in which her crime partner fatally stabbed two victims.
- Ramon Rodriguez, 49, of Los Angeles County, who has served 22 years after he was paid to kill a victim.
https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/01/15/walters-president-gavin-newsom/Quote:
"I still get buzzed when I recall that a majority of Californians looked at what Gavin Newsom allowed while mayor of San Francisco rampant homelessness, transportation gridlock, failed public projects, a widening income gap, sidewalk needles, and human, er, waste and decided they wanted that for the whole state. They elected him governor in 2018 and now complain that California is going to hell," Swaim writes.
Oh please, spare me the holier than thou, high ground bs.GBear4Life said:
Why Trump is the president:https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-27/newsom-commutes-prison-sentences-including-for-murderQuote:
Rodney McNeal, 50, of San Bernardino County has served 22 years for fatally stabbing his pregnant wife, a crime he also denies.
The others include:
- Kristopher Blehm, 35, of Santa Barbara County, who has served nearly 12 years for helping murder his crime partner's romantic rival.
- Steven Bradley, 56, of Kern County, who has served 32 years for killing a gas station attendant during a robbery.
- Jason Bryant, 40, of Shasta County, who has served 20 years for armed robberies, including one in which a victim was fatally shot by an accomplice.
- Rosemary Dyer, 67, of Los Angeles County, who has served more than 33 years for fatally shooting her husband.
- Samuel Eldredge, 61, of Humboldt County, who has served 25 years for fatally shooting his crime partner's housemate.
- Richard Flowers, 64, of Tulare County, who has served more than 25 years for killing a woman during a robbery.
- Robert Glass, 48, of Los Angeles County, who has served more than 26 years for murder during a burglary.
- James Harris, 56, of Los Angeles County, who has served more than 30 years for a drug-sales-related kidnapping and the killing of two victims.
- David Jassy, 45, Los Angeles County, who has served 11 years for killing a man during an altercation.
- Shyrl Lamar, 68, of Sacramento County, who participated in a robbery in which her crime partner fatally stabbed two victims.
- Ramon Rodriguez, 49, of Los Angeles County, who has served 22 years after he was paid to kill a victim.
What would Jesus do?GBear4Life said:
This board is outraged over political figures BS'ing their way through pressers, but are outright ambivalent about violent offenders given the opportunity to overturn their sentences and reenter society. It's telling.
"intuitively find it unacceptable" - I stated it leaves a bad taste in my mouth and that each case would have to stand on its own merits. I feel this way because most of my professional experience is in criminal defense and capital cases. Most of what you read about in regards to any large publicized case is inaccurate. Lots of information doesn't meet admissibility thresholds, blah blah, etc. . . . In other words, simply listing that someone committed a criminal act does not explain the act or the sentencing. There is always a lot more to it. I am sure if I went through the list in a deep dive, I would agree with some and disagree with others. Same as when Trump issues pardons and commutations, I agree with some and very much disagree with others. I unlike our political polar ice caps, can discern between each individually and do not through a rage blanket over all of them at once.GBear4Life said:
You are not alone in being relatively ambivalent about this, and would immediately revert to a partisan point about another individual. You admit to intuitively finding it unacceptable, but you don't have animus to the general ideology behind it or the person enacting it.
This is the cultural divide. It's a cultural divide that hurts the Left more than the Right. The Left gets this wrong in ways that alienate non-partisan centrists. The apolitical household who has no party allegiance but just has a sensible take on justice and safety in their communities and matters that actually affect people will hold their nose and vote for the R or just stay at home. Yes, the Right has liabilities like this too that alienate many in the same centrist, apolitical group.
This board is outraged over political figures BS'ing their way through pressers, but are outright ambivalent about violent offenders given the opportunity to overturn their sentences and reenter society. It's telling.
You are making multiple points on multiple issues here, some of which I agree.Tedhead94 said:
"intuitively find it unacceptable" - I stated it leaves a bad taste in my mouth and that each case would have to stand on its own merits. I feel this way because most of my professional experience is in criminal defense and capital cases. Most of what you read about in regards to any large publicized case is inaccurate. Lots of information doesn't meet admissibility thresholds, blah blah, etc. . . . In other words, simply listing that someone committed a criminal act does not explain the act or the sentencing. There is always a lot more to it. I am sure if I went through the list in a deep dive, I would agree with some and disagree with others. Same as when Trump issues pardons and commutations, I agree with some and very much disagree with others. I unlike our political polar ice caps, can discern between each individually and do not through a rage blanket over all of them at once.
And yes it is a cultural divide and one that I am happy to be on the opposite end of. There is a fine line between vengeance and justice. I am comfortable with where I stand on the spectrum. I can both say someone is guilty and should be incarcerated for a period of time and I can find them innocent - Central Park Five, Earl Washington, Roy Criner, Clyde Charles.
We have 4% of the world population and between 20-25% of the entire world's incarcerated. When our crime rate has gone down, our incarceration rate has kept going up. We have even managed to find a way to turn incarceration into a new capitalist frontier.
If you still have anger pent up and need to point it at someone, you can always move to Texas. They will handle this issue very much in line with your beliefs.
You're being disingenuous here. That's not why you're done. You're frustrated I'm not letting your flawed, contradictory and incompatible reasons off the hook.sycasey said:I'm pretty sure you're not serious about understanding mine or anyone else's perspective, just finding more reasons to browbeat.GBear4Life said:Why did those questions bother yousycasey said:GBear4Life said:
Seriously?
What's a lot of time served?
How can someone be a serial offender if they're convicted and sent to prison for life on their first offense? That's how you eliminate "serial" offenders -- you put them away .
Would you be okay if all the ex-murderers could conditionally be released but only if they live on your block?
We're done here.
GBear4Life said:
On an episode of HBO's "The Outsiders" the defense lawyer responded to a past client saying "I'm a defense lawyer. It's my job to believe in just about anything." Made me chuckle.

100% agreed. But large #% of defense lawyers will follow a client to trial on a not guilty plea and float defense that be definition they do not believe. Public defenders are guilty of this toobearister said:
A criminal defense attorney can morally and ethically represent a guilty defendant by making sure that the State follows all the laws in conducting the prosecution. Where a defense attorney steps over the line is when he/she starts floating defense theories that he knows for a fact to be untrue or preposterous.
I could not have been a criminal defense attorney unless I knew all my clients were innocent. That qualifier would have made for a short career.
This spins both ways and can be found in virtually any profession that is by its very nature adversarial.GBear4Life said:100% agreed. But large #% of defense lawyers will follow a client to trial on a not guilty plea and float defense that be definition they do not believe. Public defenders are guilty of this toobearister said:
A criminal defense attorney can morally and ethically represent a guilty defendant by making sure that the State follows all the laws in conducting the prosecution. Where a defense attorney steps over the line is when he/she starts floating defense theories that he knows for a fact to be untrue or preposterous.
I could not have been a criminal defense attorney unless I knew all my clients were innocent. That qualifier would have made for a short career.
There's motive to act malevolently in most professions, yes. But the prosecutor and defense team are on different planes, IMO. I'd never deny that aspect on the prosecutor side, no question. But I think it's foolish to equate the two.Tedhead94 said:This spins both ways and can be found in virtually any profession that is by its very nature adversarial.GBear4Life said:100% agreed. But large #% of defense lawyers will follow a client to trial on a not guilty plea and float defense that be definition they do not believe. Public defenders are guilty of this toobearister said:
A criminal defense attorney can morally and ethically represent a guilty defendant by making sure that the State follows all the laws in conducting the prosecution. Where a defense attorney steps over the line is when he/she starts floating defense theories that he knows for a fact to be untrue or preposterous.
I could not have been a criminal defense attorney unless I knew all my clients were innocent. That qualifier would have made for a short career.
Fwiw, I am not a lawyer, I do not like many lawyers, I have found lawyers to be somewhat a pain in the a$$ and too slick for my liking.
I am a paralegal and an investigator. I can say that every issue you outline for why you could not be a criminal defense attorney would be an issue that would come up on the other side with prosecutorial misconduct, evidence tampering, corruption, etc.
And then there are the cases that are clearly politically motivated and being used by the DA to run for higher office.
Its all the same. Just cut from a different direction.
bearister said:GBear4Life said:
On an episode of HBO's "The Outsiders" the defense lawyer responded to a past client saying "I'm a defense lawyer. It's my job to believe in just about anything." Made me chuckle.
The famous Bay Area criminal defense attorney, the late Charles Gary (who represented Huey Newton, other Panthers, and People's Temple) was once asked by a reporter, "Are you as good as Perry Mason?" "Better," responded Gary, "All Perry Mason's clients were innocent."
The Mother of All Criminal Defense Attorneys was Irving Kanarek. Facts from his Wikipedia page:
Irving Allan Kanarek (born May 12, 1920)[1] is a former criminal defense attorney best known for representing Charles Manson and "Onion Field" killer Jimmy Lee Smith.
Kanarek's first career was as an aerospace engineer working for North American Aviation (NAA), where he invented a corrosion inhibitor for Inhibited Red Fuming Nitric Acid for the Army's Project Nike.[2][3]...
... According to Tate-LaBianca prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi, Kanarek was legendary in Los Angeles courts for his dilatory, obstructionist tactics. In his book, Helter Skelter, Bugliosi claimed Kanarek, in a different case, had once objected to a witness identifying himself: Kanarek claimed that the witness's name was hearsay because the witness had first heard it from his mother.[6]...
... In the Tate-LaBianca trial, Kanarek objected nine times during opening statements, despite continuous censure by Judge Charles Older. During a later objection, he called witness Linda Kasabian insane, and by the third day of the trial, he had objected more than 200 times. According to author Jeff Guinn, jurors requested "NoDoz to ward off sleepiness" during his presentations, and he "infuriated his client so much" that Manson physically "attacked him in the courtroom."[7] During the course of the trial he was jailed twice by Judge Older for contempt of court. In his summation, Bugliosi dubbed Kanarek "the Toscanini of Tedium."[8]"
Perhaps if you had ever been faced with fathering a child out of wedlock and deciding what to do, you would understand that in fact, it does take courage to raise a child. Even if that child is born in wedlock, how many have the courage to put the child's needs and his spouse's needs over his own needs?GBear4Life said:
Gavin Newscum exposed by a comedian
This is nonsense, and some perverted hierarchy of virtue and duty. Not sure you even watched the video or have read this thread.Professor Henry Higgins said:
Perhaps if you had ever been faced with fathering a child out of wedlock and deciding what to do, you would understand that in fact, it does take courage to raise a child. Even if that child is born in wedlock, how many have the courage to put the child's needs and his spouse's needs over his own needs?
If you ever do anything of note with your life, perhaps you will learn that lesson one day.
There are some things the government can affect, but legislating who reproduces isn't one of them, nor is whether those two people stay together and meet their parental responsibilities.