Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are the kids who have accidentally killed people in carjackings and in stolen cars? How did it affect them? What was their incarceration like? What do they think about the incident now? What do they say about how they got to that place?
I really, really want to read interviews and reporting with these kids and the people around them. I wish the Post or someone could make that happen.
Incarceration? You must be new around here.
+1. As for "how did it affect them," I'm sure the little sociopaths never gave it a second thought.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are the kids who have accidentally killed people in carjackings and in stolen cars? How did it affect them? What was their incarceration like? What do they think about the incident now? What do they say about how they got to that place?
I really, really want to read interviews and reporting with these kids and the people around them. I wish the Post or someone could make that happen.
Incarceration? You must be new around here.
Anonymous wrote:Since they suffered no appreciable consequences for their actions (I do not view being confined to juvie for 3 years with no requirement to achieve a GED or other indicia of rehabilitation as any kind of real consequence for some of these terrible murders) I would imagine that very little actual reflection has occurred. Instead of the National Guard stunt, I would much prefer the feds to take administration of the juvenile justice system away from DC. I don't know that they would be a lot better, since what we need most is incarceration of violent juveniles in facilities where there is actual rehabilitation being mandated and milestones which have to be achieved in order to be released. And that would cost a lot of money to create. But what DC has been doing definitely does NOT work.
Anonymous wrote:I am sure a lot of those kids are out there on the streets with you.