Jimmy Higgins
Contributor
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2001
- Messages
- 50,294
- Basic Beliefs
- Calvinistic Atheist
Ain't it somethin'? You have a school. Some person shoots it up. They survive, go to trial, get convicted, life in prison with a chance at parole.
All is grand and dandy, life as usual... well except for all the victims, both families of the dead and the ones that survived and were wounded (and their families), and the ones who were "only" mentally scarred. Fine and dandy until parole pops up. And then America needs to ask themselves, "what are we doing here?!"
The Heath High School shooter, who killed three and wounded five, is up for parole, post 25 years in prison. And we find ourselves in a very uncomfortable position... well... some of us do. Some are like "give him the chair!" and they really just don't care. Quite content on either capitol punishment or losing the key.
But others! They are wondering, what in the world is parole for... when talking about someone that committed an atrocious and utterly unnecessary act? What is the Justice System for? Post 25 years, was it feasibly possible for this person to epiphany up and be ready for release? What is required for him to be ready for release? What do the victims get to say about it?
This appears to be the first case of its type in America, where we are dealing with the long-term judicial issues of locking up people that committed mass school killings* (* in 1997, 3 dead would have been considered mass killing). Personally, I have a hard time thinking a person who is around 40 should get out of a life sentence. Of course, he has spent something like 60% of his life in jail. But if we aren't comfortable with releasing the killer after 25 years... why is it even an option to begin with? If we aren't willing to discuss redemption as a person over a period of 25 years, when the killer has actually become an adult, should we even be putting it out there?
All is grand and dandy, life as usual... well except for all the victims, both families of the dead and the ones that survived and were wounded (and their families), and the ones who were "only" mentally scarred. Fine and dandy until parole pops up. And then America needs to ask themselves, "what are we doing here?!"
The Heath High School shooter, who killed three and wounded five, is up for parole, post 25 years in prison. And we find ourselves in a very uncomfortable position... well... some of us do. Some are like "give him the chair!" and they really just don't care. Quite content on either capitol punishment or losing the key.
But others! They are wondering, what in the world is parole for... when talking about someone that committed an atrocious and utterly unnecessary act? What is the Justice System for? Post 25 years, was it feasibly possible for this person to epiphany up and be ready for release? What is required for him to be ready for release? What do the victims get to say about it?
This appears to be the first case of its type in America, where we are dealing with the long-term judicial issues of locking up people that committed mass school killings* (* in 1997, 3 dead would have been considered mass killing). Personally, I have a hard time thinking a person who is around 40 should get out of a life sentence. Of course, he has spent something like 60% of his life in jail. But if we aren't comfortable with releasing the killer after 25 years... why is it even an option to begin with? If we aren't willing to discuss redemption as a person over a period of 25 years, when the killer has actually become an adult, should we even be putting it out there?