• @[email protected]
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    12 years ago

    (Just a quick disclaimer. I am vehemently opposed to prison and think we would be better off getting rid of it and actually helping people.)

    It never ceases to baffle me the amount of gender-based double standards or shitty sexist society has. If a guy did this we would get a life sentence (likely without parole). And a death sentence in a death penalty state. But, because the person that did this is female, she doesn’t get a life sentence or death penalty, she gets the luxury of getting to walk out of prison after a time of serving a sentence (just to be clear. I don’t think any prison time is ever justified or ethical. But that’s not the point. The point is to call out our misandrist society. I hope one day Equality might actually be a thing, thought it will likely be long after my lifetime.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 years ago

      You need to make up your mind Josh. No prison for anyone or “same” prison sentences for everyone, which is it? Else your comment looks just like bait. Totally against prison, lol

  • @[email protected]
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    22 years ago

    How can they convict someone on lack of evidence that they are innocent? She could have passed out for what ever reason and was not in control at all. A shocking travesty of life and justice imo.

    • Kalash
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      2 years ago

      wtf are you even talking about?

      She first threatend her boyfriend with crashing the car.

      She then killed her boyfriend by crashing her car, just like she said. On camera.

  • @[email protected]
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    262 years ago

    Hey so kind of off topic, but did anyone else read this and think this might be a problem? - “Police arrived to the scene around 45 minutes later.”

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      Did you read the part about it being very early in the morning? Who do you think is calling the police? The dead victims?

      Come on. You must be a little smarter than that, it’s all in the article…

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        I always enjoy when people lash out with ‘you must be smarter’ troll bait from a simple observation. Side note; I’ve stayed in Strongsville many times when traveling for work in Cleveland. It’s not a huge burb by any means, and it’s also not ‘empty’ or completely devoid of life. I certainly wouldn’t think there were areas I could crash my car and not have anyone report it over half an hour. FYI I’m only replying to you to hopefully educate you. If you pop your mouth off with more trollish bullshit it’s just going to be insta ignore. But by all means…

    • hypelightfly
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      By itself? No.

      It does not say “Police arrived 45 minutes after it was reported”. From that statement alone we have no idea how long between the crash and someone seeing it and reporting.

      • @[email protected]
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        Also that’s police, not EMS. I don’t really care if police arrive at all as long as EMS gets there quickly. They can always call for police too.

        • @[email protected]
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          42 years ago

          In this case that’s fair, but in some cases, particularly attempted murders, EMS may have to wait for police to ensure the scene is safe for them to work in anyway. Not to mention most police have at least some first aid training. Police response times are also very important.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        What are you talking about, that’s exactly what they are.

        Psychoactive drugs are substances that affect the brain. They range from heroin to caffeine. These substances can affect awareness, thoughts, mood, and behavior

  • 🐱TheCat
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    202 years ago

    Was she trying to kill herself too or what? How did she survive when they both died at the scene?

    • @[email protected]
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      182 years ago

      Luck, car engineering, and medical science. She was seriously injured. Was she trying to kill herself, I have no idea. Clearly needs mental health treatment which she’s not likely to get in prison. Not that I think she should be free either.

  • @[email protected]
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    42 years ago

    If her boyfriend had done what she did, he’d be getting the chair.

    What a fucking joke. If you’re going to try her as an adult you may as well execute her instead of wasting our money keeping her alive.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    I dont know why I subbed to this shit, but it certainly wasn’t to learn about random fucking misery in Ohio

    yes this is very sad and awful. I don’t give a shit. don’t want to see this kind of stuff.

    • ArxCyberwolf
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      112 years ago

      What a beacon of sunshine you are. Nothing stopped you from just scrolling past if you didn’t want to read it, or unsubbing/blocking it. For someone who doesn’t give a shit, you sure had to let everyone know you don’t.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        Yes because I’m pissed that yall sharing this fucking misery. Why? Why do any of you want to read this? Why?

  • Phoenixz
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    132 years ago

    On a side note: this is also why teenagers should not be driving cars. She was 17 and able to driver her friends around? WTH?

    Until she’s 18 she should not have a driver’s license

    Once 18 she should, until 21, only be able to drive around with an adult over 21 next to her to monitor her driving

    Cars are 2 tonnes of death on wheels, why do we allow irresponsible teenagers to play around with that?

    Well then again, this is the US were talking about, teenagers can get near military grade weapons as well and nothing ever goes wrong with that, so what am I complaining about rite?

    • Shush
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      32 years ago

      It doesn’t matter what age is it. It’s not like people suddenly stop being reckless and careless at 21. I’ve heard enough horror stories of people who are way ahead of legal age doing dangerous stuff.

      • Phoenixz
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        12 years ago

        Generally speaking, people get more responsible when they get older. Yes of course there are exceptions, some people bever grow up, but seriously… Giving a 16 year old a sports car? Are they nuts?

    • Johanno
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      02 years ago

      In Germany you can drink beer before you can drive a car. Usually people still will kill people with a car when they are old enough to drive. Drunk or not.

      • Phoenixz
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        22 years ago

        Point is that young people cause disproportionally more accidents due to lack of experience driving, lack of experience living, lack of knowledge, and lack or responsibility

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      The vast majority of teenagers are fine and require transportation to get to work/school. I wouldn’t argue against restrictions on passengers but completely stripping them of driving would fuck up so many things. How does a 18-21 year old get back and forth to college without a car for example?

      • Phoenixz
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        12 years ago

        That is an Americas problem. All the cities there are very badly designed, just for cars. In Europe (holy hell, the Netherlands) you can get everywhere by bike or public transportation or just plain walking and it’s awesome. In the US things are the way they are because of bad city design and lack of any public transportation.

        Yes, minimum driving age should be 18 and even then require adult supervision.

          • Phoenixz
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            12 years ago

            Yes.

            8 year olds also need to go to school, are we going to put those in cars too?

            • @[email protected]
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              12 years ago

              8 year olds go to school in the same town they live in and the school district has busses to go pick them up or their parents can go drop them off quickly. The same can’t be said for a student going to a college in a different town/city there’s not going to be a public transportation option that just goes straight to their school or to their job from school or whatever they need to do. They might be able to accomplish it by switching busses a couple times or something but that will add a ton of time to their commute. It’s not practical.

              On top of that, pushing the driving age back will just result in a bunch of inexperienced 18/21 year old drivers and we’ll be having the same conversation about them after a few years go by.

              • Phoenixz
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                12 years ago

                I used to ride 25 kms (16 miles, give or take?) to and from work, every day. These distances aren’t extreme eitherloads of kids would (and do) drive that to school every day as well.

                The thing that makes that possible is safe and comfortable bike lanes. More than 30 kms? use busses. If you have a good public transportation system, these busses will have direct connections and drive every 15-30 minutes during school hours.

                I know, this sounds insane in the US but that is because car manufacturers have brainwashed US citizens with the nonsense that this is how it must be. Your cities are godawful, all of them, because every city is Designed for cars, not for humans. If you get into a city designed for humans you’ll be amazed. I know because every American is amazed by how beautiful cities can be when they see them.

      • slst
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        2 years ago

        Public transportation is the standard here in europe for that kind of stuff, almost nobody among my classmate come by car. They all use the tramway, busses or bikes

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          Congratulations. We aren’t even close to being able to do that where I live. The closest college is 20 miles away.

  • @[email protected]
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    3032 years ago

    “It’s horrible for everybody. Yeah, I lost my son, it’s harder on our family, but I don’t want the rest of her life ruined too. It isn’t going to make me feel any better,” he said.

    As hard as it is to say something like that… we need more people like this.

    • I witnessed this in a case. Young driver wasn’t paying attention and crossed the line, struck head on and killed an elderly woman on her way to chemotherapy, no joke.

      On the recommendation and impassioned pleas of the victim’s family, the defendant plead a manslaughter charge down to a $75 fine for failure to maintain lane or some such infraction. I don’t remember all the facts but was struck by the forward thinking and empathy. The young driver was truly remorseful, part of the pleas were that he had suffered enough, that the memory of what he had done was punishment enough.

        • TheWoozy
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          142 years ago

          It’s a direct response to another comment, not to the article.

      • @[email protected]
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        412 years ago

        Definitely not the same situation at all. This wasn’t some distracted driver, she had literally threatened to do exactly this before.

        • Stamets [Mirror]
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          262 years ago

          From what I can tell, they never claimed it was the same situation. They said they’ve seen victims asking for a reduction in punishment, that’s all.

          Chill out and stop jumping on people for something they never said.

          • @[email protected]
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            52 years ago

            Chill out and stop jumping on people for something they never said.

            All they commented was that it wasn’t the same situation. That’s a pretty normal thing to do when someone says “oh yeah I remember that happening in this one instance”. They didn’t go after the person or bite their head off or even express aggression.

            Ironically, you’re the one jumping on someone for what they didn’t say and perceived aggression that isn’t there.

    • @[email protected]
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      92 years ago

      Yeah man. I can say I would like to think I would be that forgiving of a person, but I probably wouldn’t.

    • @[email protected]
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      1212 years ago

      It’s a nice sentiment, but…

      This was premeditated. She needs to be held accountable and have consequences for what she willfully and knowingly did.

      She literally killed people. I’m not sure this can be a case of “forgive and let her off lightly.”

      • bane_killgrind
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        172 years ago

        Being 17, I’d attribute some of the blame to her parents or whomever owns that vehicle.

        Is driving recklessly really the only symptom of being this emotionally deregulated? Did they not know how stupid or mentally ill she is?

        I bet the adults around her did not care or excused her behaviour.

        • @[email protected]
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          212 years ago

          That’s fine, but she still made a conscious decision to do it. If she was one year older, would that make any kind of difference?

          And let me be clear: mental illness can make some behaviors more understandable, but not murder– if the blame is put solely on mental illness, all that does is put more stigma on it. Not every shitty decision people make is because of “mental illness”.

            • @[email protected]
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              52 years ago

              I’m not sure you know what the word “reactionary” means if you think that my comments and opinions were “reactionary”.

              The family can grieve, and my opinion has no bearing on the outcome of whatever happens. My point was, in the end, no matter what the reason, there needs to be consequences for someone who killed people, regardless of what the grieving parties think. I don’t think that’s particularly radical.

              It’s a sad and awful situation al around. I can see why those poor families just want to move on.

          • @[email protected]
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            72 years ago

            Why only murder? Why not rape or assault or abuse or any number of different crimes deeply mentally ill people commit on the regular that ruin lives far more deeply than the death of a loved one?

        • @[email protected]
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          302 years ago

          I bet her dad was a party clown who was hoping this would happen.

          Like where the fuck do you get all of these assumptions from?

        • @[email protected]
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          72 years ago

          Did they not know how stupid or mentally ill she is?

          Just want to shout out here as an anxious and depressed person, the vast majority of the mentally ill are not psychopathic murderers. Mental health absolutely pays a role in decision making, but except for super extremely rare cases, it doesn’t turn someone into a murderer.

        • @[email protected]
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          252 years ago

          I agree. 15 years is hardly “life” in prison, though. I think it’s more than fair.

          • @[email protected]
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            82 years ago

            On one hand, yes.

            On the other hand, 17+15 is 32. Think of all of the things you do to get your life started between 17 and 32 and where you’d be if you’d waited to do the stuff you did at 17 until you were 32. That’s a whole lot of life and life experience there.

            Such a stupid senseless waste all around.

          • Alien Nathan Edward
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            122 years ago

            People change. They get better. The guy who shot Reagan got better, and they let him out. Now he writes love songs and posts them on YouTube, and sells his paintings on eBay.

              • Alien Nathan Edward
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                I agree that there should be time served, and a significant amount of it. I’m okay with 15 years. This person needs to be set aside from society while we determine if we can help them and, if we can, to do it.

                I’d like to know how we arrived at 15 years, though. Would 10 not be enough? If the court had suggested 20 I don’t think either of us would have said “But surely it can be done in 15.” It feels right but it looks kinda arbitrary and that’s interesting to me.

                • @[email protected]
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                  12 years ago

                  Oh it’s completely arbitrary. The only way I can think of making it non arbitrary would be a very long study to see how long was necessary for people to genuinely rehabilitate, but even then, it would be based on their own arbitrary sentences.

            • @[email protected]
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              122 years ago

              Means there’s a chance they get out on parole at 15 years. So they may end up with a life sentence if not approved, but regardless, she is serving 15 years.

      • Ghostalmedia
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        I don’t think he’s saying she shouldn’t be accountable and face consequences. He’s said he didn’t want her to spend life in jail. That’s going to be pretty radical for a lot of folks.

        Some people are going to think that life in prison or the death penalty should be the minimum consequence. Others are going to think that even a monster like this can repent, change and (unlike her victims) be allowed to live free eventually.

        Edit. Yikes. Important typo. “Don’t”

        • @[email protected]
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          And yet on the same turn, if the father was calling for the death penalty or even a lengthy prison sentence, you all would be admonishing the fact that he even got a say and stating this is why justice systems shouldn’t be about satisfying the victim at all.

          The hypocrisy is really blatant and self-serving. Should people be punished for their crimes or not? If yes, then you need to support predetermined sentences for crimes that apply equally across all cases, including this one. If no, then you don’t really believe in justice or government, but something much more insidious.

          • @[email protected]
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            12 years ago

            you all would be admonishing the fact that he even got a say and stating this is why justice systems shouldn’t be about satisfying the victim at all.

            Ya know, I’ve never seen anyone say that about the victim in instances like the one you describe.

            • @[email protected]
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              12 years ago

              I have, on Reddit, many a time. They often do it to oppose the death penalty or opposing punishing anyone for crimes. It’s cheap enabling and apologia for all kinds of horrific shit wrapped in a neat little package.

        • Tedesche
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          For me, it’s not about whether or not she can change and repent. I’m all for prison reforms that make prison safe and offer inmates opportunities for growth and self-improvement while they serve their sentences, but I think punishments need to fit crimes and this girl intentionally killed two other people. I think a sentence of 15 years to life is actually a bit lenient (I’m used to 25 years to life being the standard for premeditated murder). I don’t think she should mandatorily have to spend her entire life in prison, but I also don’t think she should get to enjoy even fraction of the life she robbed those two boys of. Ideally, with good behavior, I’d like to see her get out at 45-50 years of age. She would still have a few decades left, but the prime of her life would be gone—no career, no kids. That seems fair to me.

        • @[email protected]
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          That’s fair, and I get it. To me, that’s absolutely radical, especially if it was my child who was harmed.

          I personally have just learned from experience that people who get off easy are likely to continue on the path of destructive behavior.

          I’m not necessarily calling for her death or anything… but the punishment needs to fit the crime. Two lives are permanently gone from this world because of the careless and stupid choices she made.

          • @[email protected]
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            52 years ago

            I would agree, but I’d argue that that’s because our current system doesn’t actually rehabilitate people, and solely exists to punish people. Which solves practically nothing.

          • @[email protected]
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            72 years ago

            I personally have just learned from experience that people who get off easy are likely to continue on the path of destructive behavior.

            Likewise, although my experience is with a racist idiot on a Discord server who I was far too lenient with.

            • @[email protected]
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              62 years ago

              Oh, absolutely. The internet adds the layer of anonymity, too, so that certainly doesn’t help.

              • @[email protected]
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                32 years ago

                You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make them drink.

                And if that horse is being hateful and violent on top of that, it’s a lost cause.

  • @[email protected]
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    292 years ago

    How is she eligible for release if she’s found guilty of two murders? Or 15 years rather than something like 40? Murder is one of the few things I think should carry a punitive sentence rather than rehab.

    • @[email protected]
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      492 years ago

      Don’t think people can ever change, eh?

      A punitive system does not a good society make.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 years ago

        Don’t think people can ever change, eh?

        In this case, you’re betting future people’s lives on a known murderer changing.

        Disclaimer: I’m neither for nor against that.

        • @[email protected]
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          Yeah, I’d rather a known murder have the opportunity to change and potentially be a better person than to only let them rot in a fucked up punitive system.

          • @[email protected]
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            62 years ago

            A chance to change, sure. But it would be a mistake to pretend it’s not also a chance to kill again. And it turns out people actually can’t change, meaningfully, without remorse for their past deeds— And you can’t ever actually know whether they feel that. Mercy feels very good until you realize ten years later how much pain you could have avoided otherwise.

            Also, you’re presenting a false dichotomy between “Set them loose on the world” versus “Isolation and torture for the rest of their life”.

            • @[email protected]
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              42 years ago

              It’s unacceptable to put innocent people at risk in order to give a convicted violent criminal mercy. It’s very easy to say they should be released on good behavior when you live hundreds of miles away. Unless someone is willing to live as that person’s roommate or neighbor, I think it’s completely hypocritical to chastise others for supporting incarceration.

              • @[email protected]
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                32 years ago

                Somebody’s damned no matter what. The victim deserves justice. The survivors deserve peace. The perpetrator deserves a chance to do better. And the rest of us deserve safety.

                And these things cannot be reconciled. But I’m not willing to just give upon on any of them. So yes, if you could guarantee that it would give us a decent shot at having all of these things, I would be willing and honoured to live as that person’s neighbour or roommate. ..I’ve repeatedly made decisions before in my life that I think prove this, without even realising it. My life is worth less too if theirs is ruined, and I don’t actually innately care about my own safety if I think I can help someone else.

                But nobody can currently guarantee that. So, I honestly don’t care anymore. Lock them up for good and throw away the key, or kill the survivors too and then kill me too for good measure; I don’t care. Just don’t make me choose who to damn, because what I want to see is for the victim to be alive, not avenged, and for the criminal to be helped, not brutally crushed— but we can’t have that anyway.

                And Ffs, don’t let a known dangerous criminal have the chance to kill again and pretend it’s just mercy or kindness or whatever without a dangerous level of foolishness behind it while condescending at anyone who would want to see a more cautious approach. And don’t pretend that ruining one more life for some perverse ideal of “punishment” or revenge is going to fix anything either.

                This is a shitty situation, and we’ve already lost to end up in it. People have already been hurt, and no matter what you choose, more people are probably going to end up being hurt before it’s over. Pretending mercy will magically fix everything is almost just as stupid and evil as pretending “punishment” serves any moral purpose other than cruelty.


                …I’d want some kind of mercy for the man or woman who murders me. But it’s not my place to demand it for someone else’s killer, who may well go around being a threat to more and more people.

                • @[email protected]
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                  42 years ago

                  I don’t actually innately care about my own safety if I think I can help someone else.

                  It’s important that I address this if nothing else. If you truly want to be a help for someone else, you need to value your safety. You need to care about yourself. If you get killed helping person A, then what about person B or C who comes afterwards and would’ve benefited exceptionally from your help? If you want to serve, you need to serve yourself too.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 years ago

        Giving them a chance to change is very different than granting leniency. She should have a serious opportunity at rehabilitation, but she shouldn’t be free in society unless you’d feel safe leaving her with your loved ones unattended.

        We should grant mercy as often as we can, but it can never come at the expense of the innocent. I’d rather let a murderer who has genuinely changed die in prison than release a supposedly changed murderer who kills again. I’m certainly not volunteering to be that person’s neighbor if they’re released on good behavior.

        • @[email protected]
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          We should grant mercy as often as we can, but it can never come at the expense of the innocent.

          You’re presenting a pretty idealized version of our justice system, i think. A big part of why I support leniency is because of how often our justice system gets it wrong. It’s crazy to think that bad luck and low social standing can cost you most of your life. Any punishment meant for violent criminals will inevitably target a substantial number of innocents or nonviolent offenders. It’s wishful thinking to believe our justice system is usually “just”. We should strive to help the victims feel vindicates as much as possible, but it will inevitably, usually come at the expense of the innocent.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          “Don’t kill people”

          What? I’m outraged. Think of the poor murderers trying to be good people.

    • @[email protected]
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      202 years ago

      I imagine it’s her age. She wasn’t even legally an adult, not that that excuses it. Losing all her 20s and most of her 30s basically means if she does get out at exactly 15 years she’s probably much screwed her whole life even setting aside the felony on her record. Her life will look nothing like she imagined.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        Her life will look nothing like she imagined.

        You could say the same of the two men she murdered, yeah?

      • ANGRY_MAPLE
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        192 years ago

        That’s even ignoring what being in prison for that long will do to you mentally. From what I’ve heard, it’s almost a whole other world in there.

        I can’t imagine getting out after spending 15 years of my life in prison, and being able to keep the same quirks and mannerisms. Everything is just different. It’s tough for fully grown adults to transition through, let alone someone who spent the last half of their teens.

        That being said, neither of those two dead people will ever get to see a sunrise again. They’ll never get to feel the wind on their face, or tell their parents that they love them. For what?

        Intentionally murdering innocent people is despicable and soulless. I hope that they give her a lot of therapy and mental help in there. What a tragic end for such young lives.

    • @[email protected]
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      112 years ago

      It has been statistically proven that white women get easier sentences than men of any race. Her age also probably played in to that.

  • BarqsHasBite
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    2 years ago

    The Ohio teenager dubbed “hell on wheels” — who was convicted of intentionally crashing her car at 100 mph into a building, killing her boyfriend and his friend — was sentenced to two concurrent 15 years to life sentences Monday.

    Judge Russo shared blistering remarks and condemned Shirilla’s actions saying: “She had a mission, and she executed it with precision. The mission was death.”

    Judge Russo said in handing down her verdict remarks that Shirilla was “literal hell on wheels,” saying she intentionally drove at an hour when not many witnesses would be around, on a path she didn’t routinely use but had visited days before.

    Prosecutors argued in the trial that Shirilla had become turbulent and threatening towards her boyfriend and crashed to end their relationship.

    • bioemerl
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      672 years ago

      Misleading as hell titles for this running around. I thought she was just driving fast based on what I saw in the headlines last week. She totally deserves the murder charges.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 years ago

        I mean, causing a crash and killing someone in the process of speeding is still deserving of a murder sentence.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 years ago

          I believe stateside it’s called ‘manslaughter’ in a case such as that. Manslaughter is “the crime of killing a human being without malice aforethought, or otherwise in circumstances not amounting to murder.” So no, it wouldn’t be deserving of a murder sentence… Edit: Unless the jury or judge deemed it so, of course.

          • @[email protected]
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            52 years ago

            To make matters even more confusing it all depends on state. Most have manslaughter and for a couple it would be 3rd degree murder.

        • @[email protected]
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          72 years ago

          There are judges in North Dakota, North Carolina, Florida, Tennessee and Texas that would say “well, were they protesting or something?”

          Food for thought.

  • Ghostalmedia
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    1252 years ago

    During the investigation, she asked if they could just suspend her license for 10 years

    “I just killed two people with a car, so I think being forced to use Uber for a decade is an appropriate sentence.”

    • Overzeetop
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      1512 years ago

      It’s a shame she’s not a male athlete with a promising swimming career. Might have gotten off with having to take a remedial driving course and paid a small fine.

        • @[email protected]
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          742 years ago

          You do mean Brock Allen Turner who was indicted five charges: two for rape, two for felony sexual assault, and one for attempted rape? This all happened on January 18, 2015.

          • Alien Nathan Edward
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            262 years ago

            That’d be the same convicted rapist Brock Allen Turner that was last seen near Dayton OH, right?

            • @[email protected]
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              142 years ago

              Yes, and apparently just bought a house right by the university and a major bike path, and has been seen out at bars in the area. What a fucking predator.

            • @[email protected]
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              2 years ago

              It’s good to see on lemmy that people are we continuing the tradition of reminding readers of rapist Brock Turner aka. Allen Turner, the creep who got off ridiculously easy in a uniquely egregious violation of justice.

              He shall not find the peace the judge wanted to grant him.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Honestly, if she hadn’t threaded to kill her boyfriend with her car before this happened, then I think suspending her license for a decade or two or may be life would be the right solution. Prison shouldn’t be a punishment, but a way to keep everyone else safe from dangerous people. If she won’t drive, then she isn’t a danger. But it sounds like she’s dangerous no matter what.

      • @[email protected]
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        212 years ago

        The trial featured surveillance video played in court showing the moment Shirilla accelerated towards the building without stopping, until a gut-wrenching crash is heard.

        Anyone capable of doing this deserves prison time.

        • @[email protected]
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          102 years ago

          Agreed. We know she did it on purpose and is a dangerous person in general, not just a careless or even reckless driver. She needs to be in prison to keep us safe. Shes different than someone who is merely a bad driver, or even a reckless driver who just needs to be kept out of a car to keep everyone around them safe.

      • Tedesche
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        2 years ago

        Prison shouldn’t be a punishment

        Yes, it absolutely should be. I can’t stand people who think the criminal justice system shouldn’t dole out punishments, but should only aim to rehabilitate people. You folks have absolutely no empathy for victims. Punishments are important, because criminals cause suffering to other people. The entire concept of justice is based on the idea that criminals should suffer at least a modicum of the harm they do to others as payment for their crimes. Over the centuries, we have done away with the “eye for an eye” model of punishment and decided that the worst sentences we can hand down are execution and life in prison, and most people today aren’t actually in favor of execution. Spending your life in prison is a slap on the wrist compared to being murdered.

        I’m sure this girl could be rehabilitated within a few years. Under your model, she’d walk free while the parents and siblings of her victims were still trying to recover mentally from what she did to their families. Your lack of empathy for them is repugnant. You should feel ashamed.

        • @[email protected]
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          72 years ago

          Yeah! Instead the victims should be forced to pay for the perpetrator to live with free meals and housing for decades rather than attempting to treat the core of the issue if at all possible and turning these people ideally into healthy contributors to society as fast as humanely possible! That definitely helps the victims!

        • TheProtagonist
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          72 years ago

          Seems like you are blending the concepts of punishment and that of revenge. While a criminal, who’s crime has been proved in court should absolutely be punished for the crimes he/she committed according to the corresponding law, the sentences should not be led or even influenced by the feeling of “taking revenge for the victims”, because that’s not what a punishment should be about.

          I guess this is one of the main differences between judicial systems and their underlying philosophies in the US and in Europe. While in the US the state can kill / execute some person, because this person has killed another person, that would be unthinkable in Europe, because the state does not have such a “right” and killing / executing a murderer would also be a crime against that person’s life.

          European systems are more driven by the idea of “resocialising” criminals, so that they could eventually become acceptable members of society again some day.

      • @[email protected]
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        322 years ago

        Prison should not be an oubliette to put people we don’t like. It should be about rehabilitation and bettering those who have commit crimes.

        • @[email protected]
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          82 years ago

          Yes, but mercy and rehabilitation should not come at the expense of the innocent.

          Plus, when I think rehabilitating people in jail, I’m thinking of nonviolent offenses. Premeditated murder isn’t on my list of crimes I think someone can come back from, not when it’s like this.

          • @[email protected]
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            52 years ago

            Someone in prison getting the help and rehabilitation they need are not a threat to “the innocent”

            Look, if all you want is blood, just say it (you more or less already did). And then think about what that means about you

            • @[email protected]
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              72 years ago

              Someone in prison getting the help and rehabilitation they need are not a threat to “the innocent”

              Well yes, that’s my point. They’re in prison. They should have access to rehabilitation and high quality psychiatric care.

        • @[email protected]
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          112 years ago

          Agreed. I wish the USA had this point of view, but instead we do view it as an oubliette to put people we dont like.

        • @[email protected]
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          42 years ago

          Prison helps keep people safe, create deterrent, prevents vigilantism. Rehabilitation is the humane thing to do, but it is not why we isolate criminals.