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8748 Posts
On July 14 2010 08:54 Kashmir wrote:Logic dictates that if you do the crime you do the time.
There are logical reasons for criminals to not be punished. It's incorrect to say that logic is defied every time a legal system drops a charge, reduces a charge, or reduces a sentence. There are logical reasons on both sides of the issue and people have to reason out the answer. Logic doesn't dictate anything.
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Fair enough but why wouldn't it be reasonable to assume he gets a lengthy prison sentance for raping a little girl then? Ninety days seems way too lenient. Was that the usual sentance for child rape at the time? If so then I can see why he fled (even if I don't agree with it).
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"Victim Samantha Geimer, now 45-years-old, has also called for the case to be dismissed"
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8748 Posts
On July 14 2010 09:07 Kashmir wrote: Fair enough but why wouldn't it be reasonable to assume he gets a lengthy prison sentance for raping a little girl then? Ninety days seems way too lenient. Was that the usual sentance for child at the time? If so then I see why he would have fled. I don't really care about this particular case much. If someone else wants to take this up, go for it. I was just pointing out that you can't feel confident in the side of the issue you've taken just because you have a logical argument on your side. In most legal issues, there are logical arguments on both sides.
I admit I don't immediately perceive and understand why Polanski has so much support but I also admit I don't care enough to go learn why.
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imagine if someone raped your daughter, then 30 years later he gets away with it, fk that, he should get twice the time for avoiding the charges for so long
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On July 14 2010 09:10 RoyW wrote: "Victim Samantha Geimer, now 45-years-old, has also called for the case to be dismissed"
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In May, Polanski broke months of silence to plead his case in a written statement.
"It is true: 33 years ago I pleaded guilty, and I served time at the prison for common law crimes at Chino, not in a VIP prison. That period was to have covered the totality of my sentence. By the time I left prison, the judge had changed his mind and claimed that the time served at Chino did not fulfil the entire sentence, and it is this reversal that justified my leaving the United States," he wrote. That would be true if he had been given a sentence at that time, which he had not.
On July 14 2010 09:18 dafunk wrote:Show nested quote +On July 14 2010 09:10 RoyW wrote: "Victim Samantha Geimer, now 45-years-old, has also called for the case to be dismissed" I am sympathetic to Mrs. Geimer's opinion. I do not think, however, that her opinion trumps the law.
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edit::meh i just stir up shit
but ---v extradition is serious shit. that is a silly statement.
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All Sweden's ruling does is tell everyone it's ok to commit crime, hide for an extended period of time, then move to their country.
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On July 14 2010 09:30 PanN wrote: All Sweden's ruling does is tell everyone it's ok to commit crime, hide for an extended period of time, then move to their country.
Switzerland, dude. Switzerland.
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On September 28 2009 22:15 Not_A_Notion wrote:Show nested quote +On September 28 2009 21:27 Slow Motion wrote: You guys shouldn't put too much weight on what the victim wants. The purpose of criminal law isn't to get "justice" for one particular victim, but to protect society through deterrence, retribution, and rehabilitation. That's why the government, not victims, prosecutes defendants on behalf of the people.
If Polanski had sex with or raped a 13 year old, he should be sentenced accordingly, even if Geimer is ready to move on. It's not about her. Excellent point. If he felt that the judge illegally changed the plea bargain then he should have gone about trying to get it quashed without fleeing the state, Hence "In May, a Californian judge dismissed Polanski's bid because he failed to appear in court." What he tried to do was get have his cake and eat it. If his appeal succeeded he could return to the US whenever he wanted, if it failed then he wouldn't do jail time since he wouldn't be in the country, that's a pretty asymmetric outcome. No judge would agree to hear a case in that situation.
Get it quashed, how do you propose he should have done that? Polanski served his sentence and the judge wanted to change the sentence after the fact. If the new judge hadn't already made up his mind he wouldn't have insisted on Polanski turning himself in to hear the case. The US refused to turn over the details of the case to Swiss authorities to prove he was actually a fugitive.
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Zurich15302 Posts
On September 29 2009 16:43 zatic wrote:When this thread is finished I would love to make a direct comparison of the general consensus with this thread: http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/viewmessage.php?topic_id=93135I predict that torturing and killing 29000 people will be generally accepted over raping one girl. I was right!
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