Sailhack said...
It should be - murder 1 person (possibly a 'brain-fart' or crime of passion) and a life sentence (20-35yrs) in prison with rehab...commit a second murder and it should be lethal injection imo. There's no 'reasonable' excuse for committing such a horrendous crime twice!
So... you know how to do IV cannulation, Sailhack?
I reckon there's no 'reasonable' excuse for blowing up letterboxes on successive Saturday nights, nor keying multiple cars. What do you think?
This a 'brain-fart', or a crime of passion? -
"A former Sydney bank teller who suffocated an elderly customer after stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from her has slumped to the floor, gasping and moaning, as a judge sent her to prison for at least 14 and a half years...."http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-national/bank-teller-collapses-at-murder-sentence-20120629-216fy.htmlThis a 'brain-fart', or a crime of passion? -
"
A Sydney man who murdered his lover before cutting up her body with a power saw suffers from traumatic recollections, his sentencing hearing has been told."
www.smh.com.au/nsw/powersaw-murderer-left-traumatised-court-told-20120405-1weif.html#ixzz1zouytcT9This a 'brain-fart', or a crime of passion?, for a single murder -
"
It was hard to believe that the cherub-faced country kid being led from the NSW Supreme Court was about to begin the longest jail sentence given to a juvenile in the state's recent history... the 19-year-old great nephew of serial killer Ivan Milat, began a [maximum] sentence... of 43 years , for a crime so horrible it will live long in our collective memory... with a minimum non-parole period of 30 years for a crime [the judge] described as ''unimaginably cruel, brutal and violent''.
ttp://www.smh.com.au/nsw/tragedy-behind-record-sentence-20120608-201ij.html#ixzz1zoxLZGQD
~~~~
By putting up these very recent news stories - from the Sydney area alone!, I am not having a go at you Sailhack - just wanting to demonstrate that there is no easy answer. And this is why we have professional judiciary to decide on case-by-case sentencing. You and I are not in court to see the pages and pages of the social workers summations, or otherwise.