After 12 years behind bars, Markus Lanieux thought he had a deal for his release. Then Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry filed a legal challenge that could derail hope for those imprisoned under the state’s “three strikes” sentencing rules.

  • @foggy
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    471 year ago

    Three strike felony laws only call into question felony laws.

    This poor human.

    I hate the humanity I was birthed to.

  • @[email protected]
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    311 year ago

    It blows my mind that for so many of my fellow citizens the only solution to fixing a shitty state of affairs is more cops, more punishment, more jail. I imagine a world where blue collar criminals get appropriate sentences, and help, and white collar crime gets long prison sentences.

      • @[email protected]
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        71 year ago

        People forget this. They say “they need something to do in prison so it’s ok”. But what they don’t get is, when they get out they have a felony. They can’t get most regular jobs. So it usually “slave” labor as in minimum wage—which isn’t enough to live on and a lot have to come up with other means, and that usually ends up being what they know works: crime.

        Break the cycle.

    • Billiam
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      121 year ago

      It’s because conservatives are incapable of understanding that social problems are complex and don’t have simple answers. To them, crime is solved by guns/police/jail. So if you still have crime, you must not have enough guns/police/jail.