Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There will always be crazy violent people. We can’t solve 100%. It’s the overall trend that we should be concerned with. In general, violent crimes are trending down.
Agree we also need more services for people. Tax the billionaires. No one needs a 5th yacht.
Nonsense. This has nothing to do with services. Crazy violent people do not belong with the general population. The end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is because violent repeat offenders are not prosecuted and if they are it us too light of a sentence before they are released from jail.
There needs to be mandatory incarceration of mentally ill who are convicted or crimes it found not mentally competent.
Reed’s criminal record includes nearly 50 prior arrests since 2017, with past convictions for arson, aggravated battery, and assault.
THIS. All of it.
Throwing people in jail seems to have done a great job of preventing crime. /s
We have the highest number of incarcerated people in the world and yet still plenty of crime. Throwing people in jail is not working. Maybe fix the actual problems instead of throwing people away.
Doesn’t matter what the actual number is or the percentage - It’s a big country! Let’s try for once to actually arrest offenders and keep all criminals in jail, and you’ll finally see law abiding people breathing freely without the relentless crime around them.
Why doesn’t the percentage matter? If we incarcerate a bigger percentage of our population than most other places (which we do), it suggests that’s not the solving the problem.
No, it doesn’t. Are you comparing our arrest percentage of the population to…. Denmark? Saudi Arabia? It’s irrelevant. I’m not sure what conclusion you want to draw by this comparison. This is the United States, and we are different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is because violent repeat offenders are not prosecuted and if they are it us too light of a sentence before they are released from jail.
There needs to be mandatory incarceration of mentally ill who are convicted or crimes it found not mentally competent.
Reed’s criminal record includes nearly 50 prior arrests since 2017, with past convictions for arson, aggravated battery, and assault.
THIS. All of it.
Throwing people in jail seems to have done a great job of preventing crime. /s
We have the highest number of incarcerated people in the world and yet still plenty of crime. Throwing people in jail is not working. Maybe fix the actual problems instead of throwing people away.
Doesn’t matter what the actual number is or the percentage - It’s a big country! Let’s try for once to actually arrest offenders and keep all criminals in jail, and you’ll finally see law abiding people breathing freely without the relentless crime around them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is because violent repeat offenders are not prosecuted and if they are it us too light of a sentence before they are released from jail.
There needs to be mandatory incarceration of mentally ill who are convicted or crimes it found not mentally competent.
Reed’s criminal record includes nearly 50 prior arrests since 2017, with past convictions for arson, aggravated battery, and assault.
THIS. All of it.
Throwing people in jail seems to have done a great job of preventing crime. /s
We have the highest number of incarcerated people in the world and yet still plenty of crime. Throwing people in jail is not working. Maybe fix the actual problems instead of throwing people away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is because violent repeat offenders are not prosecuted and if they are it us too light of a sentence before they are released from jail.
There needs to be mandatory incarceration of mentally ill who are convicted or crimes it found not mentally competent.
Reed’s criminal record includes nearly 50 prior arrests since 2017, with past convictions for arson, aggravated battery, and assault.
THIS. All of it.
Throwing people in jail seems to have done a great job of preventing crime. /s
We have the highest number of incarcerated people in the world and yet still plenty of crime. Throwing people in jail is not working. Maybe fix the actual problems instead of throwing people away.
The prosecutors from this guy’s last case begged the judge to hold him in jail. She refused and let him out. If he had been in jail, that young woman would have gotten home from work that day. Instead, she’s in the ICU fighting for her life and has burns over 60% of her body. That is not okay.
+ 1 million
I don't know how judges who make decisions like that one sleep at night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is because violent repeat offenders are not prosecuted and if they are it us too light of a sentence before they are released from jail.
There needs to be mandatory incarceration of mentally ill who are convicted or crimes it found not mentally competent.
Reed’s criminal record includes nearly 50 prior arrests since 2017, with past convictions for arson, aggravated battery, and assault.
THIS. All of it.
Throwing people in jail seems to have done a great job of preventing crime. /s
We have the highest number of incarcerated people in the world and yet still plenty of crime. Throwing people in jail is not working. Maybe fix the actual problems instead of throwing people away.
Doesn’t matter what the actual number is or the percentage - It’s a big country! Let’s try for once to actually arrest offenders and keep all criminals in jail, and you’ll finally see law abiding people breathing freely without the relentless crime around them.
Why doesn’t the percentage matter? If we incarcerate a bigger percentage of our population than most other places (which we do), it suggests that’s not the solving the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is because violent repeat offenders are not prosecuted and if they are it us too light of a sentence before they are released from jail.
There needs to be mandatory incarceration of mentally ill who are convicted or crimes it found not mentally competent.
Reed’s criminal record includes nearly 50 prior arrests since 2017, with past convictions for arson, aggravated battery, and assault.
THIS. All of it.
Throwing people in jail seems to have done a great job of preventing crime. /s
We have the highest number of incarcerated people in the world and yet still plenty of crime. Throwing people in jail is not working. Maybe fix the actual problems instead of throwing people away.
Anonymous wrote:
Doesn’t matter what the actual number is or the percentage - It’s a big country! Let’s try for once to actually arrest offenders and keep all criminals in jail, and you’ll finally see law abiding people breathing freely without the relentless crime around them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is because violent repeat offenders are not prosecuted and if they are it us too light of a sentence before they are released from jail.
There needs to be mandatory incarceration of mentally ill who are convicted or crimes it found not mentally competent.
Reed’s criminal record includes nearly 50 prior arrests since 2017, with past convictions for arson, aggravated battery, and assault.
THIS. All of it.
Throwing people in jail seems to have done a great job of preventing crime. /s
We have the highest number of incarcerated people in the world and yet still plenty of crime. Throwing people in jail is not working. Maybe fix the actual problems instead of throwing people away.
Doesn’t matter what the actual number is or the percentage - It’s a big country! Let’s try for once to actually arrest offenders and keep all criminals in jail, and you’ll finally see law abiding people breathing freely without the relentless crime around them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is because violent repeat offenders are not prosecuted and if they are it us too light of a sentence before they are released from jail.
There needs to be mandatory incarceration of mentally ill who are convicted or crimes it found not mentally competent.
Reed’s criminal record includes nearly 50 prior arrests since 2017, with past convictions for arson, aggravated battery, and assault.
THIS. All of it.
Throwing people in jail seems to have done a great job of preventing crime. /s
We have the highest number of incarcerated people in the world and yet still plenty of crime. Throwing people in jail is not working. Maybe fix the actual problems instead of throwing people away.
Anonymous wrote:There will always be crazy violent people. We can’t solve 100%. It’s the overall trend that we should be concerned with. In general, violent crimes are trending down.
Agree we also need more services for people. Tax the billionaires. No one needs a 5th yacht.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issue is that civil rights and disability advocates keep fighting for only VOLUNTARY treatment and say it is abusive to force people into treatment or asylums even if people are mentally ill, violent, do not understand they are delusional, and are on the streets.
The rights of deluded individuals are many times over more important than the rights of working class people to access safe transportation and to walk on sidewalks clear and free of tents, sleeping people, aggressive individuals.
No one should be allowed to attack others and simply get released to attack another person, and then another.
After a completely UNPROVOKED attack on a social worker who ended up unconscious with a concussion, a chipped tooth and optic nerve bruising. The prosecutor begged Judge Teresa Molina-Gonzalez to keep Reed in jail.
He pleaded, “The defendant poses a real and present threat to the safety of, especially this victim, whoever else was working in the hospital that day, and the community as a whole. The defendant randomly and spontaneously became irate in this situation where the victim was just attempting to do her job as a social worker, and now as a result, suffered injuries so severe that she still has side effects on a daily basis."
He also reviewed his past crimes including arson and attacking other women.
“I can’t keep everybody in jail because the state’s attorney wants me to, but I understand and respect your position,” the judge told prosecutors, according to court transcripts.
So he was released with an ankle monitor.
Why is it so many supposed mentally ill men are declared so mentally ill but are with it enough to know not to attack a man of their size. They target females and people smaller than they are. If you understand that then maybe you are really just an evil person.
The issue is not civil rights. When you've been arrested 50 times, all bets should be off. I don't give a damn about your made up civil rights at that point. You are preying on people. PERIOD.
Stop defending the indefensible. Start getting tough with these people. They've done a lot of damage.