|
Posts: 33691
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 2:36 am
Life.
Or 4 years.
|
Brenda
CKA Uber
Posts: 50938
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 7:07 am
Well, if he'd been tried as a youth, he'd be out now.
As long as the psychs are considering him "a danger", he will stay where he is.
|
Posts: 11907
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 8:03 am
Brenda Brenda: Well, if he'd been tried as a youth, he'd be out now.
As long as the psychs are considering him "a danger", he will stay where he is. You've got more faith than I do Brenda. This POS will, more than likely, be free within 5 years. 
|
Brenda
CKA Uber
Posts: 50938
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 8:11 am
2Cdo 2Cdo: Brenda Brenda: Well, if he'd been tried as a youth, he'd be out now.
As long as the psychs are considering him "a danger", he will stay where he is. You've got more faith than I do Brenda. This POS will, more than likely, be free within 5 years.  I sure as hell hope not...
|
andyt
CKA Uber
Posts: 33492
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 9:51 am
2Cdo 2Cdo: Brenda Brenda: Well, if he'd been tried as a youth, he'd be out now.
As long as the psychs are considering him "a danger", he will stay where he is. You've got more faith than I do Brenda. This POS will, more than likely, be free within 5 years.  Do you guys just make this shit up or what? For juveniles sentenced as adults, as he was, life means 10 years before possibility of parole. Since the judge basically called him a psychopath, the kid will probably stay in longer than that. Still, they will release him eventually, and with his young age I would say he's a ticking time bomb.
|
Brenda
CKA Uber
Posts: 50938
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 10:06 am
andyt andyt: 2Cdo 2Cdo: Brenda Brenda: Well, if he'd been tried as a youth, he'd be out now.
As long as the psychs are considering him "a danger", he will stay where he is. You've got more faith than I do Brenda. This POS will, more than likely, be free within 5 years.  Do you guys just make this shit up or what? For juveniles sentenced as adults, as he was, life means 10 years before possibility of parole. Since the judge basically called him a psychopath, the kid will probably stay in longer than that. Still, they will release him eventually, and with his young age I would say he's a ticking time bomb. Ehmmm... $1: Melvin Skeete Jr., who was 16 years old at the time of the incident, was sentenced Monday in Nova Scotia Youth Court to life in prison with no chance of parole until Dec. 3, 2017.
|
Posts: 33691
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 10:22 am
andyt andyt: 2Cdo 2Cdo: Brenda Brenda: Well, if he'd been tried as a youth, he'd be out now.
As long as the psychs are considering him "a danger", he will stay where he is. You've got more faith than I do Brenda. This POS will, more than likely, be free within 5 years.  Do you guys just make this shit up or what? For juveniles sentenced as adults, as he was, life means 10 years before possibility of parole. Since the judge basically called him a psychopath, the kid will probably stay in longer than that. Still, they will release him eventually, and with his young age I would say he's a ticking time bomb. Wrong, he could get out in 2017; that's 4 years from now, 7 years after the crime. After that, the bleeding hearts will take over and whine and whine some more.
|
andyt
CKA Uber
Posts: 33492
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 10:24 am
Whoops. Maybe that 10 year deal is only in BC. Or only applies to 1st degree.
Well let's hope that: "A psychologist with the IWK Health Centre who testified at the sentencing hearing said Skeete Jr.'s long history of violent behaviour, his anti-social behaviour, violent outbursts and substance abuse concerned her.
Based on her assessment, she told the court Skeete Jr. is at a high risk to violently reoffend." will help to keep him in longer. But he's aboriginal, so who knows. A few smudging ceremonies and sweat lodge sessions and he'll be deemed good to go.
|
Posts: 4235
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 10:47 am
Released in 4 year
Now that's some bullshit right there, once again I ask what does one have to do in Canada to actually get somekind of punishment.
Also there is a lot out in the media, like shows, articles etc etc specially about what life inside US jails and prison is like, but could never find anything on Canadian jails.
From the sentences I hear would the image in my head of Canadian jails being similar to those Scandinavian resorts they call prisons be wrong ?
|
andyt
CKA Uber
Posts: 33492
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 10:52 am
desertdude desertdude: From the sentences I hear would the image in my head of Canadian jails being similar to those Scandinavian resorts they call prisons be wrong ?
Yes. And not all Scandinavian prisons are resorts either, tho I guess you could call them that compared to some US prisons. In fact the "resort" in Norway has a much lower recidivism rate than other prisons in Norway. I don't want this guy held in a hellhole. Give him and every prisoner a decent situation - the punishment is the loss of freedom. But this guy needs to stay in a lot longer than 4 years. I hope the parole board doesn't let us down.
|
Posts: 11907
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 11:05 am
andyt andyt: Whoops. Maybe that 10 year deal is only in BC. Or only applies to 1st degree.
Well let's hope that: "A psychologist with the IWK Health Centre who testified at the sentencing hearing said Skeete Jr.'s long history of violent behaviour, his anti-social behaviour, violent outbursts and substance abuse concerned her.
Based on her assessment, she told the court Skeete Jr. is at a high risk to violently reoffend." will help to keep him in longer. But he's aboriginal, so who knows. A few smudging ceremonies and sweat lodge sessions and he'll be deemed good to go. Maybe before jumping to conclusions YOU should read the entire story. 
|
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 1:10 pm
andyt andyt: Whoops. Maybe that 10 year deal is only in BC. Or only applies to 1st degree. Time served + sentence = 11 years. Maybe that's how the math of it works out. The involvement of drugs and alcohol might explain some of the savagery, but the crime, plus the history of violent anti-social behaviour, would make this man a definite danger in open society no matter when he gets out. I wouldn't be the psychologist signing his papers.
|
Posts: 4235
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 1:35 pm
andyt andyt: I don't want this guy held in a hellhole. Give him and every prisoner a decent situation - the punishment is the loss of freedom. But this guy needs to stay in a lot longer than 4 years. I hope the parole board doesn't let us down. I don't think 4 years or even 11 is enough punishment for taking someone's life so brutally. Such people don't deserve any second chances, their victims got any. Specially after watching a lot of documentaries on US prison and Jails. Many people serving life without parole are living a somewhat decent life behind bars. Many even in solitary confinement some have adjusted and come to terms with their fate and living out their life quitely and all that on the tax payers dime. Although a very tough punishment but IMO it does not do justice to anyway to the victim, their loved ones and society in general.
|
Posts: 19986
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 2:05 pm
Welcome again to the Canadian judicial system <insert belly laugh here>....Another case of our Canadian judicial system proving to be a joke. Sentenced to life in prison for 2nd degree murder Melvin Skeete Jr. could be back on the street in less than 5 years!! Where else can a convicted murderer sentenced to life in prison spend less time behind bars than someone convicted of drug possession, car theft or smuggling? It's time the courts stop "coddling" these people with their sentences being reduced by time served, good behaviour and any other bonuses they may receive, they should no longer allow them to be incarcerated in "resorts"! The term "life in prison" should mean just that.....life! Their time in prison should mean 23 hours a day in a barred cell with the minimum comforts allowable.
|
|
Page 1 of 2
|
[ 16 posts ] |
Who is online |
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests |
|
|