• ZeroCoolOP
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    741 year ago

    It’s good that he’s going away for 22 years. However, the sentencing guidelines called for between 324 to 405 months (27-33 years) so by the Judge’s own calculations this is a miscarriage of justice and yet another right wing domestic terrorist is being handled with kid gloves. Fucking disgraceful.

    • @[email protected]
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      251 year ago

      27 year minimum sentences are already insanity. If the justice system is supposed to be corrective rather than vengeful, there’s nothing to be gained from these overly long sentences. No one’s willingness to commit a crime is going to change with a 22 year sentence vs. a 33 year sentence, and the offender is no more likely to reform in years 23-33 than they were in years 12-22.

      22 years is A LONG TIME. So long that they’re almost certainly going to have fully adapted to prison life as “normal” long before it ends, and long enough that no one would ever consider it a reasonable cost for potential reward. Someone getting a two-decade sentence was entirely counting on not getting caught/charged.

      • @Son_of_dad
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        211 year ago

        The American system is built for punishment and profit. Most Americans don’t seem to be interested in justice or rehabilitation, they just want blood. Good example is the 50 or so prisoners who have died in Texas from the heat, most weren’t there for violent crimes or life imprisonment, yet the response to their death is mostly “whatever, they’re bad people” as people show no interest in fixing anything.

        • GreenBottles
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          91 year ago

          … using Texas as an example about the entire USA is probably not a great choice.

          • @[email protected]
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            51 year ago

            Should we use the conditions of California prisons, which were so crowded that they were considered an unconstitutional human rights violation and prisoners were released by court order?

      • Meldroc
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        181 year ago

        I’m all for keeping him in there for longer, simply for the purpose of keeping him out of circulation. Doesn’t hurt my feelings that he’s going to be in his 60’s before he gets out.

        • @CharlesDarwin
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          21 year ago

          This. In ordinary cases, I might be for leniency / shorter sentences. However, these people are very dangerous. They are home-grown terrorists and a message has to be sent others who have similar ideas about civil war and/or insurrection in support of fascists like donnie. Keeping people like this out of civilization for a very long timeout is critical.

          • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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            1 year ago

            Yeah but if we were trying we could rehab this dude in like two years. Probation conditions and monitoring could keep him in check, not just him pretty much any convict.

            • @CharlesDarwin
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              11 year ago

              I wonder if we could rehab the entire GOP in two years.

              • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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                11 year ago

                When it a group I think it’s called reeducation, which is arguably needed.

                These people’s entire ideology is based on the lies of trickle down economics, rage culture, sexism, and racism. Whatever education they got, it wasn’t enough to make them realize how stupid and incorrect their ideas are.

      • @Ensign_Crab
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        141 year ago

        It’s so neat seeing how sentences suddenly become too long when a rightwing bigoted piece of shit gets something approaching the guidelines.

        • @Anamnesis
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          91 year ago

          I think most people who object to long sentences on here aren’t doing it out of sympathy for these guys’ political views.

        • @Soulg
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          31 year ago

          People have been saying sentences are too long forever.

      • chingadera
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        131 year ago

        Being arrested and being held a few weeks changed my perspective on just how long jail/prison time is vs time being free. Those weeks felt like an eternity.

      • Jordan Lund
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        41 year ago

        22 years ago was 2001. So the equivalent time from 9/11 to now in prison.

        Doesn’t seem like enough to me. I mean I went from 30 something to 50 something, I still have life in front of me.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          If your desire is for him to not have any life in front of him, then your goal for the prison system is neither to prevent crime nor to rehabilitate criminals. Just admit it’s bloodthirstiness and execute the wrongdoers.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        What I don’t get is who does he click up with? Are the whites going to take him? Is he white? Do they and will they break rules because of who he is? I ask these questions but in the end don’t give a shit I guess. Good riddance to this loser but yeah our prison system is quite fucked.

      • GreenBottles
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        11 year ago

        This would carry more weight if you cited sources for your statements. ;)

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      If the reduced sentence allowed a swifter sentence, it may be a good thing overall, as this can now be used as precedent.

      • ZeroCoolOP
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        1 year ago

        You can try to spin it as a “good thing” that the Trump appointed judge failed to deliver a sentence in accordance with the guidelines all you want. The fact of the matter remains Tarrio got off far too easy and by at least five years.