English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I think that its wrong because is influencing the board with all those crocodile tears.

2007-11-13 01:48:52 · 19 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

19 answers

Yes, if you can't handle the consequences of your actions don't do them. For gosh sakes man where is your remorse? No Parole For You. Now go back to your cell.

2007-11-13 01:53:23 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 12 0

I'm sure that was the law when the crime was commited. If you find this annoying, read up and know the laws of consequence prior to be sure you can handle them as easily as the crime committed. Everything has two sides. Second, if you don't like the current laws, you like anyone may start your own campaign to make efforts to change them. You cannot complain on things you could of prevented, avoided and didn't, or have the ability to change and don't make the effort to. While you are incarrcerated read some books to better educate yourself on the things you want here. In the process you may find thats the better route to have taken from the begining..........

I HAVE to ask, and am curious of the response. I wonder where the mind of a person is that feels they have a "right" to another persons being, yet that same person has no "right" to their own tears?? Does this mean that rather than shed crocodile tears in court it would be better suitable to you if she walked over with a ball bat and took care of the problem at hand rather than whine over it? You know following your own directions in the handling of it. I think it would be more suitable to me too. In 7 years you all can meet again for another round. I'm sure you'll remember her too.

2007-11-13 02:07:42 · answer #2 · answered by savahna5 6 · 2 0

The victim has every right to be there. They offer a perspective of how your crimes impacted others.

Of course this influences the board, however you received a fair trial, or at least a shot at a fair trial. You received punishment. A parole hearing is simply to judge if you are entitled to be released from your punishment early. There is absolutely no expectation that only your side, as well as your recent behavior is going to be weighed. Just like in a trial, both the victim and the guilty have the right to speak.

2007-11-13 02:04:14 · answer #3 · answered by smedrik 7 · 4 0

Flip the situation, and answer it yourself:

Do you have the right to show up at the parole hearing for Big Bubba from cell block D, just because he assaulted you in the shower last month? Even if it means that he stays in the pen, and you're out free?

2007-11-13 02:02:19 · answer #4 · answered by Ralfcoder 7 · 2 0

The assaulter could be offended they are in detention center; it would desire to be risky for the attack sufferer. it can't be vindictiveness, yet concern. quite than getting offended in this way, it would desire to help to do greater to deliver the sufferer on your part. A public apology in front of the board, courteousness for the duration of the intending, a willingness to settle for what they be certain whether it is going against you; all of those would desire to deliver approximately the sufferer laying off in the subsequent parole board assembly.

2016-12-16 07:25:11 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you have done 7 years for assault, it seems to me this was no minor slap across the face.
Yes, she has every right to show up at your parole hearings, to present her side of the case. You are right, she is there to influence the parole panel.

2007-11-13 02:01:35 · answer #6 · answered by Colonel 6 · 3 0

Did you do seven years because of the assault? It must have been serious.

If you did the time for something else, the assault still must have been serious, if she feels it is important enough to come to your parole hearing......

You seem to have a history of harming others and serious antisocial behavior, and I don't really want you in my neighborhood until this changes,

2007-11-13 01:59:55 · answer #7 · answered by mr_fartson 7 · 5 0

Yes that is her legal right.
It does influence the board, thats true, but what is probably even more influential was the fact that you didn't seem to feel any regret for your actions.
"Just because you assaulted her?"

2007-11-13 01:57:26 · answer #8 · answered by kari 6 · 7 0

Hell yes! If you assaulted the woman, of course she can show up! Or do you mean that its' an unrelated parole?

2007-11-13 01:56:48 · answer #9 · answered by qwerty 3 · 7 0

Yes she has every right to come and tell them how your crime against here have affected her life. You dont sound like you have any remorse for the crime you committed. She can influence them and help keep you in jail so you dont commit the crime again. Good Luck to her on keeping you in jail.

2007-11-13 02:00:47 · answer #10 · answered by mnwomen 7 · 4 0

fedest.com, questions and answers