If you can’t differentiate between murder and accidental death, I’ve got no time to educate you. |
+1 |
| I did not think dui’s are as serious as crimes with intent to harm, because obviously no one is seeking a car accident. I do agree that driving should be a privilege and the second dui should require a ten year driving ban or breathalyzer ignition activation. |
DUIs aren’t accidental death. They are murders. |
More often than not, it doesn't fit the definition of murder. Manslaughter, not murder. There is a difference. But don't let the facts get in the way of a good rant . . . |
Sure! you have lots of time on your hands. But I do not need you to “educate” me. I know the difference. My response was to the statement that “long prison sentences do not work, otherwise we would have empty prisons”. Which is an illogical and stupid comment written by a typical privileged American. Long sentences absolutely work and keep murderers away from us, law abiding citizens. |
But they did kill someone which makes them a murderer |
|
Personally I think the following crimes should all require long sentences, to prevent re-offending and creating more victims, because I don’t think these perpetrators can be rehabilitated:
- Rape - Child molestation - All murders including DUIs and reckless driving murders |
NP, and of course not. But that's why we don't allow grieving survivors to determine the punishment for homicides. Incarcerating someone for decades has to be a logical, reasoned decision that takes into account many factors. The pain of a victim's loved ones is only one of them, and frankly not the most important one. |
[headdesk] Negligence is, definitionally, the absence of intent. There are so many people talking out of there asses here. |
The law disagrees with you. |
| Some of yall are acting like a drunk driver who kills someone is not intending to kill them? They are using a deadly weapon (a car) in a very dangerous manner so while they most likely didn't start driving thinking "I want to kill someone right now", they are absolutely intentionally doing that. Their judgment is impaired by alcohol, yes, but they are still making that choice. If someone is drunk and starts a fire in a crowded building or gets drunk and shoots a gun into a crowd or gets drunk and does any other homicidal action, they are acting with intent to kill because any of those actions are actions you only do if you accept the risk that it will likely severely injure someone. Whether you're drunk or not. I don't think keeping people in prison for lengthy terms is the answer but if they kill someone yes they do need to be imprisoned for awhile. They need to be punished for their crime and then rehab can be focused on from there. In addition to prison time, revoke their license permanently, require the interlock and breathalyzers on all vehicles they may have access to, force them into rehab, have officers drop in on them at random for tox screens, put a billboard up with their face on it and info about their drunk driving record. I'm only 1/2 joking about those last 2 things. I know nothing is fool proof, but it seems that would work better to stop them re-offending than other measures. |
So all mommies driving their three kiddos to soccer practice, if they hit and kill someone while texting, will also go to prison for 10-20 years? |
OK, so negligence lacks intent. Therefore, any crimes which involve negligence lack intent and should be punished accordingly since DCUM has decided that only intent matters. Failure to maintain your rental property is just a fine. If someone dies in a fire related to that lack of maintenance, it's just a fine. I can't see how this would be abused. |
Isn't alcohol an extenuating factor to the contrary? I get a driver may be confused and accidentally turn the wrong way onto a one way. But once a driver starts drinking, seems like all bets are off. |