Not being defensive or anything, but you can’t assume that…people react to things differently mate. It might not be what you expect. I had a similar experience, a close friend of mine just passed away a few years ago…the way i reacted wasn’t with tears and screaming, but I felt horrible and grieved.
an 18 year old in my town was sentenced to 20 years in prison for murder . he wrote the newspaper saying he did not understand why he went to prison for just one mistake . SMH.
hobbgreen: That's what I think they were saying. Kids and young adults truly believe they're not going to be punished to the fullest extent because they see society as an extension of their parents. They really think the victims, the victims' families, the prosecutor, judge, jury, and society will think, "Of, it's just a kid. Let's go easy on him. It's her first offense. Poor kid grew up in a bad neighborhood, had bad friends, it could happen to anyone." They don't understand how sick and tired of sociopaths We All are, regardless of age, color, religion, etc. We just want psychos dealt with permanently. Many prefer the death penalty. Many prefer Life without parole. Some think kids should be let go after they turn 18-25. A few believe these monsters shouldn't be punished at all for some insane reason. So, We have an uneven, often unjust system that is just as likely to punish victims as criminals
There was recently a 6 yr old who shot a teacher in Virginia. As of Oct 2022, 24 states have no minimum age for prosecuting children (may have since changed). Capitol punishment for minors existed until 2005. Now kids have to be older than 13/14 to be charged as adults.
In the US, what some younger people don’t understand is that if you are with a group of people intending to commit a crime (no matter what that crime is), and someone is murdered during committing the crime, the whole group of people intending to commit the crime is charged with murder, not just the one person who actually did it. That’s why some stupid people think they aren’t guilty themselves.
@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 facts. Atleasr I'd say 40 to 60 percent of teens atleast will get involuntary manslaughter or reckless homicide if they talk to policeb
"Who did you kill?" would not be the first or second question I would ask my daughter. Her mother's tone was that of a parent who knows her child is hanging around nefarious characters.
We live in a society, in the U.S., where parents hand out zero discipline. Kids, today, believe there are Zero consequences to their actions. Parents, actually, defend their childs "right" to do as they please and anyone who disagrees can F-off. You hear it all the time, "we don't believe in hitting/disciplining our child, we "talk" to them", which is usually, "didn't I tell you to stop that", then the kid flips off his mother and keeps right on doing it.
12:26 That is the case in Canada, there's a clause in the law that 12-17 year olds get a max of 10 years and their identities are never publicly revealed, but there is an exception if it's a 16 year old and it's a "significant" crime they can be charged as an adult.
There was a case in Florida where a 15yr old kid was practicing wresting moves with his friend, and accidentally killed him. He was sentenced to life. Chappelle even talks about it on stage earlier in his career.
Question for my own blunt brain's sake. Is that specifically if they're 16 or are you meaning 16 and above? I'm only asking because there are weird laws everywhere and that'd both surprise me and not surprise me if that was the case.
I’m ok with lower terms for younger people, but only if they are “rehabilitated” & depends on the type of crime. For ex a single shooting incident may not indicate a future of crime, but things like peeping Toms, people who steal underwear, & SA, never stop. They usually escalate and need high surveillance after release.
In the us, if you are participating in the commission of a felony, and someone dies, you can be charged with their death, even if you had absolutely nothing to do with it. You could be charged with their death even if it came about due to police accidentally shooting them. You started the crime, therefore you are responsible for everything that happens as a result.
Each state has its own rules for crimes and sentences. The hiccup girl is from Florida and down here life means life. Florida also has the death penalty. My native state of New York, however, is completely different. The guy who murdered my family member in the 1980s got a 25 years to life. This means he had to serve 25 years before being eligible for parole. He competed the 25 years and now he has a parole hearing every 2 years to ask for his freedom. Every time my family must travel to the hearing and relive the horrible story to keep the bastard locked up. Each time NY screws over my family because the thug keeps threatening to murder my family member directly connected to the case. Outside of NY, California some other liberal state, most US states have stiff sentences. Texas and Florida lead the nation in executions.
🤣🤦🏼♂️ Here are the 10 states with the highest murder rate: Mississippi - 20.50 per 100k Louisiana - 19.90 per 100k Alabama - 14.20 per 100k Missouri - 14 per 100k Arkansas - 13 per 100k South Carolina - 12.70 per 100k Tennessee - 11.50 per 100k Maryland - 11.40 per 100k Illinois - 11.20 per 100k New Mexico - 10.80 per 100k Yep. All liberal states. The highest "conservative state", Mississippi, has 80% MORE murders than the highest "liberal state". Or if you prefer, the highest murder rate in a "liberal state" is only 56% what it is in the highest "conservative state"🤦🏼♂️🤦🏼♂️🤦🏼♂️
I went to jail for child support. A 17 year old came in from Juvie. He beat a guy with a baseball bat and put him in the trash. Another guy, 19, robbed an old woman's house he mowed the lawn for. She came home, he killed her, then raped her, then urinated on her
There's just Zero reason for that to have happened to you. With any luck, change is coming that will stop that kind of nonsense because that's ridiculous. Same for people who are locked up with savages who commit felonies and high misdemeanors for minor bs crimes. That's just wrong
@@jeremyjoyner7483 That should not happen in America at all, period. But, as I mentioned, slowly but surely, it looks like more Men's issues are getting attention and support. We just have to be aware and help those who introduce common sense legislation, like was just done in Tennessee. I'm sorry you had to endure that
@@jeremyjoyner7483 Hang in there as best you can. I know it doesn't mean much because you have to endure all this stuff in real time, but there are A Lot of people, Men And Women, who understand what you're going through and are with you in that understanding. It's True
@@goatitisful It was, but I clearly forgot a word in my haste 😅 There, I fixed it for ya. I hope you can sleep now and your OCD doesn't keep you up all night, princess.
Each life sentence carries a certain amount of years before the possibility of being paroled . That's why sometimes the perpetrator will get multiple life sentences . When they get the sentence of life without parole , it's a death sentence ,, they are there until death . Some of it doesn't make much sense to me . If you have done something so heinous to get life without parole . Why not the death sentence ? With courts the way they are , if someone gets the death sentence they end up with so many court appeals that keep them alive . Sometimes more than 10 years and that's not counting the years that the actual being put to death takes !! One of the crazy things in the laws is the 3 strikes rule . If you're caught selling drugs three different times you can get life . Big difference between selling drugs and murdering someone !!! I guess you could say that the drugs are killing people , but the seller isn't forcing them to buy or to take the drugs !
I taught for awhile in Northern California and had some boys as students whose families were mostly men in prison, or women nagging at them not to be like their Dads. One boy was a junior - so he had his dad’s name. Of course he wanted to be like him. The gangs start in the neighborhood, but are active in prison. It’s all connected. The dads, uncles and grandfathers were in prison and in the gang, while the boys were being approached to join the same gang. These guys seem so set on living life in prison, you want to create a way for them to go that doesn’t involve hurting anybody else. I only worked with a couple of these guys but they weren’t exceptions. There’s a whole prison culture affecting a large number of families.
in the case where the girl set the man up to be robbed by her boyfriend and his friend..... she had to know there was a chance things could go to far... and I think she knew he would probably be killed.... because of the fact that he could identify her as the one who set him up to be robbed. He saw her face... and the face of her boyfriend and friend. Even if she didn't have a clue.... she lured him to his death and he would not have been there if not for her. I don't care that they threw their lives away for 50 dollars... they would have just been a shit stain on humanity anyway...they took a man away from people who loved him for 50 dollars... His life was worth so much more than that
If I was working in a British court I wouldn't want anyone with a camera in there, ever. I mean, they're still wearing those amazingly ridiculous things on their heads and, for some reason, people are still able to take them seriously🙂 The few times I come across footage from a British court, for a very brief moment, my mind immediately thinks it's watching something from Monty Python's Flying Circus😂
@@mrwonderful2142 Do you know how many innocent people are on death row? It's around 3%. That's a lot of fucking people who will die for something they didn't do when you consider how many people America has in prison.
Murder is mostly in the US is at the state level and depends on each state. The laws vary. Some states have very strict laws as you mentioned that even if you didn't pull the trigger or did not organize the crime but you were, say a lookout or a driver and someone was murdered, you are just a guilty as the trigger puller. Where in other states not so much. As for Federal laws that's a different story. Here in the US murder is a state charge unless it involves Federal property, Federal employees or Federal politicians in general. There are some exemptions on jurisdictional issues such as serial killers and kidnappers etc. which are the jurisdiction of the FBI. And yes, I know that there are other exemptions regarding Federal and State jurisdictions on murder for any haters out there but they are few.
Decades ago one of our family members was murdererd and about every 10 years we have to go and beg for them to not let the killer out because he has been out for us for decades.
@@KingAllYear Something like that, the individual is technically part of the family by marriage. so we have 2 sides of the family, but one side is under heavy pursuasion. This has been going on since the 80s.
@@KingAllYear also sorry for the vagueness. but I'm trying to not dox myself or my family or the killers side of the family. as the case was televised. I'm no legal expert and to be honest I'm not sure what should and should not be said. so I'm sort of walking on eggshells.
Rehabilitation only works on a small percentage of incarcerated criminals. It's about preventing evil people from doing more evil things. And justice also involves appropriate punishment.
Are your courts open to the public? Someone can walk in, sit down, and just watch? We can apply to film and distribute court cases, but no footage of children. They was easier to allow filming because technically most court cases are open to the public, you just can’t film it. No one can take the time to sit for hours to watch. Mostly family or future lawyers.
Not only is without the possibility f parole exactly that, but he gets one appeal. A recent Supreme Court ruling has determined that no matter what evidence comes forward, no matter how much it may exonerate you, no one gets a second appeal. The only way anyone with a sentence of that type gets out alive is escape (which very rarely succeeds) or if laws change retroactively (which is generally very unlikely.) They'll live their entire life in the prison system and die there. Edit thanks to @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883: They could also have their sentence commuted or be pardoned, also generally a rare event, especially for violent crime.
I think the person that sets up the murder is far worse than the person that pulls the trigger because it’s implied they set it all up! Send me a comment of what you think.
the consequences and prison life should be taught in grade school , jr high and high school .start slow in grade school then by high school students should tour a prison . scared straight .
A “Life” sentence in the US generally equates to about 20 years. You can be given multiple life sentences, set to run either concurrently or consecutively (which makes a big difference obviously). That first clip was definitely in another video recently, I think it was ‘10 most outrageous courtroom outbursts’ That USC shooting reminded me of a time when I was in college, hanging out in downtown Santa Barbara at the local Irish pub. I wound up leaving around 6pm and driving home. The next day I found out there’d been a shooting out in front of the bar a couple hours after I left. Some gangbanger from LA was drunk and starting shooting into the crowd of people. A handful of people died, including a friend of a friend. The gangbanger was shot to death by police at the scene. Pretty awful.
A life sentence is a life sentence, but there is a possibility of parole, the only way a person can get out of a life sentences by serving their entire life there or being granted parole at some point. Life sentence without the possibility of parole means you’re gonna die in the prison.
If the sentence is going to be life without parole, it should be life without parole or food or water. No reason taxpayers should have to pay to feed them forever. I'd love to hear a judge say, "We can't kill you, but we're not going to feed you, either".
So the last guy got life for shooting 4 people but no one died, and the dude who killed the toddler by beating him to death got his reduced to 18 to life, so he could be out by the time hes 35.
not to excuse what this pos did, he definitely deserves a very long prison sentence, but yeah, it's definitely weird that he got a harder sentence than pretty much everyone in this video who actually killed someone
We dont know what was said in the court room but my guess is that they determined that he was a gangbanger and by looking at his history of past crimes from which he didnt learn
@@chris-hu7tm I read up on that case a while back because my uncle went to USC to study law and he said that they didn't have enough evidence to prove it was even him. The gun didn't have his fingerprints and he didn't have any GSR on his person to prove he even shot a gun that day. All they had was a few witnesses who we don't even know could be trusted, they tried to make him look like a gang member when he wasn't. He was shot in the past because of mistaken identity and nothing to do with gangs. The prosecutor was pressured by the school and it's rich donors to convict someone ASAP
You have a point but not only is it a lot to get into I’m afraid there’s not that many emotionally intelligent folks in the chat to facilitate an actual conversation so I acknowledge there is a discrepancy when the justice system considers kids “kids” and while senseless murder should never be punished with some severity there is the very real issue of mental acuity and decision making that affects all brains until 24 and later if you’re a male and there is fickle accountability for that unless you’re wealthy or sympathetic enough
@@TrumpIsRetarded That’s a huge stretch buddy many don’t get out in 20 years and to say they are released to a happy existence is equally so. Life is life; there aren’t many who find some happiness after unless their Caucasian and middle class. IA some cases where this occurs vs the severity of the crime leaves a bad taste to be desired but it is impossible to paint brush the justice system
@@blackgirlcouchreviews No it’s not a stretch “buddy”. Why do you want murderers to find happiness? Why do murderers deserve a second shot at life when they took someone else’s? Why is it the dumbest people with the worst grammar that think race has anything to do with it? Some questions you should ask yourself
@@TrumpIsRetarded If you feel the need to insult vs having a conversation only proves my point and if you actual believe there is no racial angle to the justice system tells me I’m wasting my energy. Good day
That sounds nice as a theory. But implementation is a whole issue. Not every guilty verdict is accurate - having any margin of error at all turns innocent people into murder victims and the people who man the system into murderers. And who will do the executions? Either it will be someone with a good heart whose humanity is torn apart from killing other humans, or it will be a sociopathic wannabe serial killer getting off on it. Those individuals may not deserve to live, but the logistics of having state sponsored executions are sort of a blight on humans in itself.
@@Hoobyj Yeah, so much simplistic black/white thinking in this comment section. Not to mention people watch too much NCIS an Law and Order so when they hear "dna testing" they assume it's 100% accurate when that couldn't be farther from the truth. Most DNA is contaminated and most fingerprints are partial and inconclusive.
Prison is a business. So instead of costing money they actually Prisoners provide funding to the state/feds for every head in there. Plus almost free labor.
@@mr.niceguy777 The for-profit prisons are, the others aren't. But yeah, I agree. America will turn literally any industry into a business because...capitalism > humanity. Don't even get me started on healthcare.
Is it just me or did that hiccup girl's parents not act all that shocked? They were just like "who did you kill?"
Can't expect a monster of a kid to come from saint parents. Apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
@@TheCrazyCanuck420actually a lot of murderers have great parents. Some of them on drugs and have mental issues. Its not always from bad parents 🤦♀️
Not being defensive or anything, but you can’t assume that…people react to things differently mate. It might not be what you expect.
I had a similar experience, a close friend of mine just passed away a few years ago…the way i reacted wasn’t with tears and screaming, but I felt horrible and grieved.
an 18 year old in my town was sentenced to 20 years in prison for murder . he wrote the newspaper saying he did not understand why he went to prison for just one mistake . SMH.
hobbgreen: That's what I think they were saying. Kids and young adults truly believe they're not going to be punished to the fullest extent because they see society as an extension of their parents.
They really think the victims, the victims' families, the prosecutor, judge, jury, and society will think, "Of, it's just a kid. Let's go easy on him. It's her first offense. Poor kid grew up in a bad neighborhood, had bad friends, it could happen to anyone."
They don't understand how sick and tired of sociopaths We All are, regardless of age, color, religion, etc.
We just want psychos dealt with permanently. Many prefer the death penalty. Many prefer Life without parole. Some think kids should be let go after they turn 18-25. A few believe these monsters shouldn't be punished at all for some insane reason.
So, We have an uneven, often unjust system that is just as likely to punish victims as criminals
“please don’t take my life away” as u took a life away-🤡
If this guy could kill the girl he "loved", what could he do to us? Luckily, we don't have find out.
i think a lot of murderers have little to no emotions as well, like lack of guilt, conscience.
Those would be sociopaths/psychopaths
@@MM-jc7uv ye
There was recently a 6 yr old who shot a teacher in Virginia.
As of Oct 2022, 24 states have no minimum age for prosecuting children (may have since changed). Capitol punishment for minors existed until 2005. Now kids have to be older than 13/14 to be charged as adults.
In the US, what some younger people don’t understand is that if you are with a group of people intending to commit a crime (no matter what that crime is), and someone is murdered during committing the crime, the whole group of people intending to commit the crime is charged with murder, not just the one person who actually did it.
That’s why some stupid people think they aren’t guilty themselves.
felony murder AKA talk or else.
@@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883I’m not your buddy, guy
@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 facts. Atleasr I'd say 40 to 60 percent of teens atleast will get involuntary manslaughter or reckless homicide if they talk to policeb
bruh "im a 16 yo blonde" all i gotta do is cry this bullshit is making my blood boil
I can't believe I actually felt bad for that guy before that got revealed 😠
"Who did you kill?" would not be the first or second question I would ask my daughter. Her mother's tone was that of a parent who knows her child is hanging around nefarious characters.
We live in a society, in the U.S., where parents hand out zero discipline. Kids, today, believe there are Zero consequences to their actions. Parents, actually, defend their childs "right" to do as they please and anyone who disagrees can F-off. You hear it all the time, "we don't believe in hitting/disciplining our child, we "talk" to them", which is usually, "didn't I tell you to stop that", then the kid flips off his mother and keeps right on doing it.
12:26 That is the case in Canada, there's a clause in the law that 12-17 year olds get a max of 10 years and their identities are never publicly revealed, but there is an exception if it's a 16 year old and it's a "significant" crime they can be charged as an adult.
There was a case in Florida where a 15yr old kid was practicing wresting moves with his friend, and accidentally killed him. He was sentenced to life. Chappelle even talks about it on stage earlier in his career.
Question for my own blunt brain's sake. Is that specifically if they're 16 or are you meaning 16 and above? I'm only asking because there are weird laws everywhere and that'd both surprise me and not surprise me if that was the case.
@@willvr4because he was black.Florida don't like black people
I’m ok with lower terms for younger people, but only if they are “rehabilitated” & depends on the type of crime. For ex a single shooting incident may not indicate a future of crime, but things like peeping Toms, people who steal underwear, & SA, never stop. They usually escalate and need high surveillance after release.
@@salteadog33are you on drugs? You think people who sniff underwear should receive more time in prison than murderers? I bet you vote Democrat😂
They dont think they will pay anything for their actions because they're always getting excuses these days and getting away for their actions
In the us, if you are participating in the commission of a felony, and someone dies, you can be charged with their death, even if you had absolutely nothing to do with it. You could be charged with their death even if it came about due to police accidentally shooting them. You started the crime, therefore you are responsible for everything that happens as a result.
Each state has its own rules for crimes and sentences. The hiccup girl is from Florida and down here life means life. Florida also has the death penalty. My native state of New York, however, is completely different. The guy who murdered my family member in the 1980s got a 25 years to life. This means he had to serve 25 years before being eligible for parole. He competed the 25 years and now he has a parole hearing every 2 years to ask for his freedom. Every time my family must travel to the hearing and relive the horrible story to keep the bastard locked up. Each time NY screws over my family because the thug keeps threatening to murder my family member directly connected to the case.
Outside of NY, California some other liberal state, most US states have stiff sentences. Texas and Florida lead the nation in executions.
🤣🤦🏼♂️
Here are the 10 states with the highest murder rate:
Mississippi - 20.50 per 100k
Louisiana - 19.90 per 100k
Alabama - 14.20 per 100k
Missouri - 14 per 100k
Arkansas - 13 per 100k
South Carolina - 12.70 per 100k
Tennessee - 11.50 per 100k
Maryland - 11.40 per 100k
Illinois - 11.20 per 100k
New Mexico - 10.80 per 100k
Yep. All liberal states. The highest "conservative state", Mississippi, has 80% MORE murders than the highest "liberal state". Or if you prefer, the highest murder rate in a "liberal state" is only 56% what it is in the highest "conservative state"🤦🏼♂️🤦🏼♂️🤦🏼♂️
I went to jail for child support. A 17 year old came in from Juvie. He beat a guy with a baseball bat and put him in the trash. Another guy, 19, robbed an old woman's house he mowed the lawn for. She came home, he killed her, then raped her, then urinated on her
There's just Zero reason for that to have happened to you.
With any luck, change is coming that will stop that kind of nonsense because that's ridiculous.
Same for people who are locked up with savages who commit felonies and high misdemeanors for minor bs crimes. That's just wrong
@LA_HA well, this is Illinois. I owed money, lock me up with killers
@@jeremyjoyner7483 That should not happen in America at all, period.
But, as I mentioned, slowly but surely, it looks like more Men's issues are getting attention and support.
We just have to be aware and help those who introduce common sense legislation, like was just done in Tennessee.
I'm sorry you had to endure that
All I owe is interest.
@@jeremyjoyner7483 Hang in there as best you can. I know it doesn't mean much because you have to endure all this stuff in real time, but there are A Lot of people, Men And Women, who understand what you're going through and are with you in that understanding.
It's True
Can't wait for Daz to be back and tell us the full story. 🤣
Was that supposed to be a complete sentence???
@@goatitisful It was, but I clearly forgot a word in my haste 😅 There, I fixed it for ya. I hope you can sleep now and your OCD doesn't keep you up all night, princess.
I was in Dubai once and went to a murder trail. Everyone started throwing shoes after the verdict- Daz.
Someone told me he's wrapping up the last part of pride month, is that true?
Yes that first guy was in a prior clip. The killer smiled in court about raping and murder. Vile human.
They should sell tickets and popcorn and cups of drinks for the entertainment...lolol
‘If we had a place we could put them all to sort out their differences’. We do. Its called prison, dave. Lol
Each life sentence carries a certain amount of years before the possibility of being paroled . That's why sometimes the perpetrator will get multiple life sentences . When they get the sentence of life without parole , it's a death sentence ,, they are there until death . Some of it doesn't make much sense to me . If you have done something so heinous to get life without parole . Why not the death sentence ? With courts the way they are , if someone gets the death sentence they end up with so many court appeals that keep them alive . Sometimes more than 10 years and that's not counting the years that the actual being put to death takes !! One of the crazy things in the laws is the 3 strikes rule . If you're caught selling drugs three different times you can get life . Big difference between selling drugs and murdering someone !!! I guess you could say that the drugs are killing people , but the seller isn't forcing them to buy or to take the drugs !
I taught for awhile in Northern California and had some boys as students whose families were mostly men in prison, or women nagging at them not to be like their Dads. One boy was a junior - so he had his dad’s name. Of course he wanted to be like him. The gangs start in the neighborhood, but are active in prison. It’s all connected. The dads, uncles and grandfathers were in prison and in the gang, while the boys were being approached to join the same gang. These guys seem so set on living life in prison, you want to create a way for them to go that doesn’t involve hurting anybody else. I only worked with a couple of these guys but they weren’t exceptions. There’s a whole prison culture affecting a large number of families.
in the case where the girl set the man up to be robbed by her boyfriend and his friend..... she had to know there was a chance things could go to far... and I think she knew he would probably be killed.... because of the fact that he could identify her as the one who set him up to be robbed. He saw her face... and the face of her boyfriend and friend. Even if she didn't have a clue.... she lured him to his death and he would not have been there if not for her. I don't care that they threw their lives away for 50 dollars... they would have just been a shit stain on humanity anyway...they took a man away from people who loved him for 50 dollars... His life was worth so much more than that
The mother is a piece of work
If I was working in a British court I wouldn't want anyone with a camera in there, ever.
I mean, they're still wearing those amazingly ridiculous things on their heads and, for some reason, people are still able to take them seriously🙂
The few times I come across footage from a British court, for a very brief moment, my mind immediately thinks it's watching something from Monty Python's Flying Circus😂
...or have they maybe come to their senses and finally let that one go now?
17:15 mutual combat zone 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Each state decides if cameras can be in the courtroom. Federal courts so not allow cameras to televise cases.
Never forgive those who can do such crimes, I don’t care how old they are. Forget life in prison, use the death penalty.
Unfortunately too many states have gotten rid of the death penalty
@@mrwonderful2142 Do you know how many innocent people are on death row? It's around 3%. That's a lot of fucking people who will die for something they didn't do when you consider how many people America has in prison.
Murder is mostly in the US is at the state level and depends on each state. The laws vary. Some states have very strict laws as you mentioned that even if you didn't pull the trigger or did not organize the crime but you were, say a lookout or a driver and someone was murdered, you are just a guilty as the trigger puller. Where in other states not so much.
As for Federal laws that's a different story. Here in the US murder is a state charge unless it involves Federal property, Federal employees or Federal politicians in general. There are some exemptions on jurisdictional issues such as serial killers and kidnappers etc. which are the jurisdiction of the FBI. And yes, I know that there are other exemptions regarding Federal and State jurisdictions on murder for any haters out there but they are few.
1st degree is a death sentence. 2nd degree is life no parole.
Just wanted to say that you guys are doing great while Daz is away. Thanks!
Decades ago one of our family members was murdererd and about every 10 years we have to go and beg for them to not let the killer out because he has been out for us for decades.
How has he been out for you guys if he’s in prison?
Is it connections out in the streets?
@@KingAllYear Something like that, the individual is technically part of the family by marriage. so we have 2 sides of the family, but one side is under heavy pursuasion. This has been going on since the 80s.
@@KingAllYear also sorry for the vagueness. but I'm trying to not dox myself or my family or the killers side of the family. as the case was televised. I'm no legal expert and to be honest I'm not sure what should and should not be said. so I'm sort of walking on eggshells.
Rehabilitation only works on a small percentage of incarcerated criminals. It's about preventing evil people from doing more evil things. And justice also involves appropriate punishment.
I put these kind of vids as a lullaby.
behavior in prison and a model prisoner.
Are your courts open to the public? Someone can walk in, sit down, and just watch?
We can apply to film and distribute court cases, but no footage of children. They was easier to allow filming because technically most court cases are open to the public, you just can’t film it. No one can take the time to sit for hours to watch. Mostly family or future lawyers.
😢for the victims but 😂 at the criminals
Life for life. Its fair!
Not only is without the possibility f parole exactly that, but he gets one appeal. A recent Supreme Court ruling has determined that no matter what evidence comes forward, no matter how much it may exonerate you, no one gets a second appeal. The only way anyone with a sentence of that type gets out alive is escape (which very rarely succeeds) or if laws change retroactively (which is generally very unlikely.) They'll live their entire life in the prison system and die there. Edit thanks to @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883: They could also have their sentence commuted or be pardoned, also generally a rare event, especially for violent crime.
they can also be pardoned or have their sentence commuted. Not likely but it is a legal possibility.
@@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 True, I forgot to include that remote possibility, thanks for mentioning it.
* Channel Support * Positive Message *
14 year olds are killing nowadays and are deeply involved in the carjacking game.
I think the person that sets up the murder is far worse than the person that pulls the trigger because it’s implied they set it all up! Send me a comment of what you think.
We call that from now on
The lookout is just as evil and should be given life
What are you talking about? A lot of lookouts are roped into the situation. Idk why Americans think every crime deserves a life sentence.
the consequences and prison life should be taught in grade school , jr high and high school .start slow in grade school then by high school students should tour a prison . scared straight .
Cameras are usually allowed unless there are victims that are minors.
Are cops in the UK allowed to lie to suspects during interrogation?
A “Life” sentence in the US generally equates to about 20 years. You can be given multiple life sentences, set to run either concurrently or consecutively (which makes a big difference obviously).
That first clip was definitely in another video recently, I think it was ‘10 most outrageous courtroom outbursts’
That USC shooting reminded me of a time when I was in college, hanging out in downtown Santa Barbara at the local Irish pub. I wound up leaving around 6pm and driving home. The next day I found out there’d been a shooting out in front of the bar a couple hours after I left. Some gangbanger from LA was drunk and starting shooting into the crowd of people. A handful of people died, including a friend of a friend. The gangbanger was shot to death by police at the scene. Pretty awful.
A life sentence is a life sentence, but there is a possibility of parole, the only way a person can get out of a life sentences by serving their entire life there or being granted parole at some point. Life sentence without the possibility of parole means you’re gonna die in the prison.
No parole means NO parole.
Yep. Wild West over here
Aw, the reaction to the WAP is gone.
Yall reacted to the first one like a week or two ago
If the sentence is going to be life without parole, it should be life without parole or food or water. No reason taxpayers should have to pay to feed them forever. I'd love to hear a judge say, "We can't kill you, but we're not going to feed you, either".
The girl lucky since in Florida we give death sentences n this last month someone on death row was just executed
I see 5 wastes of tax payer money
if only these judges were soros backed. these kids would be free that day
when its about them they dont like it too much do they?
Why would anyone want to see this? Just because something happens doesn't mean it's to be watched for entertainment FFS.
So the last guy got life for shooting 4 people but no one died, and the dude who killed the toddler by beating him to death got his reduced to 18 to life, so he could be out by the time hes 35.
not to excuse what this pos did, he definitely deserves a very long prison sentence, but yeah, it's definitely weird that he got a harder sentence than pretty much everyone in this video who actually killed someone
We dont know what was said in the court room but my guess is that they determined that he was a gangbanger and by looking at his history of past crimes from which he didnt learn
@@chris-hu7tm I read up on that case a while back because my uncle went to USC to study law and he said that they didn't have enough evidence to prove it was even him. The gun didn't have his fingerprints and he didn't have any GSR on his person to prove he even shot a gun that day. All they had was a few witnesses who we don't even know could be trusted, they tried to make him look like a gang member when he wasn't. He was shot in the past because of mistaken identity and nothing to do with gangs. The prosecutor was pressured by the school and it's rich donors to convict someone ASAP
@@CoutureThugyea now that’s crazy
Just like law enforcement, all judicial courts are different so all outcomes are not uniform. It sucks but it's pretty easy to wrap your head around.
Whoever put this compilation together created some major clickbait 😕
Just as disturbing as these crimes is the life without parole for young people, anyone.
No, what’s disturbing is intentionally killing someone and being free to live your life 20 years later. It’s disgusting actually
You have a point but not only is it a lot to get into I’m afraid there’s not that many emotionally intelligent folks in the chat to facilitate an actual conversation so I acknowledge there is a discrepancy when the justice system considers kids “kids” and while senseless murder should never be punished with some severity there is the very real issue of mental acuity and decision making that affects all brains until 24 and later if you’re a male and there is fickle accountability for that unless you’re wealthy or sympathetic enough
@@TrumpIsRetarded That’s a huge stretch buddy many don’t get out in 20 years and to say they are released to a happy existence is equally so. Life is life; there aren’t many who find some happiness after unless their Caucasian and middle class. IA some cases where this occurs vs the severity of the crime leaves a bad taste to be desired but it is impossible to paint brush the justice system
@@blackgirlcouchreviews No it’s not a stretch “buddy”. Why do you want murderers to find happiness? Why do murderers deserve a second shot at life when they took someone else’s? Why is it the dumbest people with the worst grammar that think race has anything to do with it? Some questions you should ask yourself
@@TrumpIsRetarded If you feel the need to insult vs having a conversation only proves my point and if you actual believe there is no racial angle to the justice system tells me I’m wasting my energy. Good day
@boblawblaw1755 look at Mexico Ukraine Russia
First
as far as I am concerned, if you purposely take a life then you forfeit yours.
That sounds nice as a theory. But implementation is a whole issue. Not every guilty verdict is accurate - having any margin of error at all turns innocent people into murder victims and the people who man the system into murderers.
And who will do the executions? Either it will be someone with a good heart whose humanity is torn apart from killing other humans, or it will be a sociopathic wannabe serial killer getting off on it.
Those individuals may not deserve to live, but the logistics of having state sponsored executions are sort of a blight on humans in itself.
@@Hoobyj Yeah, so much simplistic black/white thinking in this comment section. Not to mention people watch too much NCIS an Law and Order so when they hear "dna testing" they assume it's 100% accurate when that couldn't be farther from the truth. Most DNA is contaminated and most fingerprints are partial and inconclusive.
@@Hoobyj blah blah blah, stop trying to introduce thought and logic into my off the cuff statement, lol.
I think if you're given life without parole, you should be given the option for the death penalty. They're just taking up space and costing money.
Prison is a business. So instead of costing money they actually Prisoners provide funding to the state/feds for every head in there. Plus almost free labor.
@@mr.niceguy777 The for-profit prisons are, the others aren't. But yeah, I agree. America will turn literally any industry into a business because...capitalism > humanity. Don't even get me started on healthcare.