Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What can we do at this point? (Besides vote against Charles Allen but I was already going to that)
Pretty much nothing. Current DC political leadership, and anyone that might foreseeably be elected here anytime soon, believes as a matter of policy that it is better to tolerate a higher crime rate in order to reduce incarceration and avoid damaging the life prospects of offenders to the extent possible. They aren’t pro-crime or anti-public order per se, but those are less important considerations. Crime victims are regrettable collateral damage.
Anonymous wrote:What can we do at this point? (Besides vote against Charles Allen but I was already going to that)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What can we do at this point? (Besides vote against Charles Allen but I was already going to that)
If you’re in Ward 6, send him an email. He needs to hear from constituents because there’s a small group of loudmouths who are very supportive of decriminalizing literally everything.
Anonymous wrote:What can we do at this point? (Besides vote against Charles Allen but I was already going to that)
Anonymous wrote:
I’m glad there is a little more coverage of how stupid jury trials for all misdeamenors would be. I get that everyone is super woke these days and progressive criminal justice is de rigeur, but Jesus Christ, use your brains. This would cause so many quality of life crime issues. Violent crime is on the rise. Maybe we shouldn’t be scared to arrest and enforce the law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The mayor and the chief of police have big problems with Allen's proposals:
https://dcist.com/story/22/10/25/bowser-objects-portions-criminal-code-overhaul/
A handful of objections to a 231-page rewrite around which the Mayor and Chief said "there was “consensus” around 95% of the rewrite of the code" is hardly "big problems" with the code.
And, to be clear, these are not "Allen's proposals." This is the work product of the CCRC and, in fact, Allen and his Council colleagues have walked back a number of recommended changes in response to objections by the USAO and others.
Anonymous wrote:The progressive city counsel wants to turn D.C. into San Francisco.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The mayor and the chief of police have big problems with Allen's proposals:
https://dcist.com/story/22/10/25/bowser-objects-portions-criminal-code-overhaul/
A handful of objections to a 231-page rewrite around which the Mayor and Chief said "there was “consensus” around 95% of the rewrite of the code" is hardly "big problems" with the code.
And, to be clear, these are not "Allen's proposals." This is the work product of the CCRC and, in fact, Allen and his Council colleagues have walked back a number of recommended changes in response to objections by the USAO and others.
Anonymous wrote:The mayor and the chief of police have big problems with Allen's proposals:
https://dcist.com/story/22/10/25/bowser-objects-portions-criminal-code-overhaul/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any person facing potential jail time SHOULD be able to demand a jury trial.
This proposed law is not the problem; putting people in jail for up to a year for minor offenses is the real problem.
The US incarcerates a higher percentage of its population than any other country in the world.
Jailing people for minor offenses is expensive to taxpayers and dangerous for the individuals placed in jail or prison.
Poor people go to jail for misdemeanors. This is wrong & unfair. We need better ways to handle minor offenses.
It's funny how this is basically the opposite of how DC handles traffic offenses.
The penalties for speeding and other infractions are pretty stiff and keep getting stiffer. When people say they're disproportionate to the offense, the response is invariably, "don't speed -- obey the law and you have nothing to worry about."
But here, with penalties for real actual crimes like violent assaults, the attitude is never "if you don't commit crimes, you have nothing to worry about." The attitude is always "can't we go easier on people who commit violent assaults?"