Members unicorn Posted 17 hours ago Members Posted 17 hours ago I recently heard in the news that a judge in Chicago was sentencing a mass murderer to seven consecutive life sentences. I'm happy that this murder will never see the light of day (he pleaded guilty), but I don't understand the logic of sentencing someone to seven consecutive life sentences. I've only heard of one, probably apocryphal, story of someone coming back to life after death. Only cats, as far as I know, are reputed to have 9 lives. Maybe we have someone more knowledgeable in legal matters who can explain this type of sentence... https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/highland-park-shooter-to-serve-7-consecutive-life-sentences/3730113/ "A judge handed seven consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole to the gunman who pleaded guilty to a mass...". Quote
Keithambrose Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago 1 hour ago, unicorn said: I recently heard in the news that a judge in Chicago was sentencing a mass murderer to seven consecutive life sentences. I'm happy that this murder will never see the light of day (he pleaded guilty), but I don't understand the logic of sentencing someone to seven consecutive life sentences. I've only heard of one, probably apocryphal, story of someone coming back to life after death. Only cats, as far as I know, are reputed to have 9 lives. Maybe we have someone more knowledgeable in legal matters who can explain this type of sentence... https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/highland-park-shooter-to-serve-7-consecutive-life-sentences/3730113/ "A judge handed seven consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole to the gunman who pleaded guilty to a mass...". I'm afraid this is just American justice, so called. This type of sentence is not uncommon. You see,'life plus 99 years', for example. A guy convicted of child porn offences, pretty nasty, was convicted on 10 counts, so Judge gave him 20 years on each count,to run consecutively. I believe that prisons there are largely privately run, for profit. I read an article this week about a district in Texas, where they were saying they must do something about the number of murders of inmates in prison! Quote
reader Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 46 minutes ago, Keithambrose said: I believe that prisons there are largely privately run, for profit. Actually the UK has a higher percentage of inmates in private lock ups. Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_prison unicorn 1 Quote