99 years for supergluing, that's way too...
Carry on.
Yep. This was me exactly.
99 years for supergluing, that's way too...
Carry on.
My apologies guys. The Coma thing seems like it should be in the title.
A Dallas judge sentenced a young mother to 99 years in prison Friday after she admitted to super-gluing her toddler’s hands to a wall
and beating the girl so severely she ended up in a coma
If the child hadn't fallen into a coma and the women were arrested and sentenced to jail, I'm guessing we'd get quite a few "I was beaten as a kid, and it set me straight" posts.
Probably.
I'm not sure how anyone can say a 99 year sentence is reasonable. You wouldn't get that much for a murder charge.
If the child hadn't fallen into a coma and the women were arrested and sentenced to jail, I'm guessing we'd get quite a few "I was beaten as a kid, and it set me straight" posts.
Why do they keep these kind of people in jail?
I say torture them, then kill them
Because the victim is a child. In a society that doesn't shock easily anymore, child abuse is still way up there in terms of outrage.
Because we should be leading by example and not becoming like them. It's pretty hypocritical sentencing someone to be tortured for torturing.
Because we should be leading by example and not becoming like them. It's pretty hypocritical sentencing someone to be tortured for torturing.
Because the victim is a child. In a society that doesn't shock easily anymore, child abuse is still way up there in terms of outrage.
Why is this better than sentencing her to 5 years in gaol and making sure she's never responsible for children again?
As with most other instances of family-abuse, there's little evidence to suggest she's a danger to anyone outside of her care. There's no evidence to suggest that other instances of parental violence will be prevented by an excessive sentence.
All this does is ensure the US prison population is 1 higher for the remainder of her lifetime.
NoRéN;43128338 said:Seriously.
Who the fuck bites a child?
And we have to agree with that, why?
But she's eligible for parole starting at year 30.