It wouldn’t be fair to have your felony conviction negatively impact your opportunities. This is how justice works right?

  • OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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    11 days ago

    It’s wild how much the slowness of the judicial system distorts society. Rich people delay forever and evade punishment…this was a crime from 2016, 8 years ago, he was found guilty in May and won’t even get his sentence until late November, let alone start serving it.

    But, this is also a cause of some of the major issues at the Southern border. The immigration system is so bogged down that it can’t process the volume, judges are doing bulk decisions with seconds reading each case, people are being released into the US until their case can be heard which can be a long time, and that process is so politically toxic that both parties have switched to flatly illegal methods of rejecting legal asylum seekers or other legal immigrants.

    I’m not a legal expert but can we get some proposals to speed this all up? Do we just dump resources at it, get more judges so they can have fewer cases? Change the laws? Something needs to happen here.

    • theangryseal@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      It’s crazy how money puts people in permanent positions too, even after they’ve lost it all.

      I have a friend for example, his family ran one of the biggest farms in the area. They had millions. With those millions they made very important connections.

      They’ve been broke for a decade now.

      See, some years back my old buddy was thrown off of a horse and has permanent brain damage. Something changed in him after that. What he’s doing isn’t something anyone can defend, but he should have been stuck in a hospital and treated. Before his mother died, she kept him on his medication and he was ok. After her death no one is there to enforce it, so he doesn’t take it.

      He’s been charged with stalking three women in less than two years. He gets it in his head that they love him and they’re testing him. The judge is in on it, the police. Anything anyone says he interprets as being part of this big test. “I was there at the local arts center and the cops came and said, “We know you care for her but you can’t be here.” See, they know I care for her. It’s all a big test buddy, I’m telling you.”

      It took multiple charges before they finally put him in jail. 2 with the first woman, 3 with the second, 2 with the third. Finally they couldn’t do him favors anymore. Or, favors for his dad that is. His dad played golf with the judge for years, the family lawyer is a lifelong friend who has finally had enough and was working his cases for free. I think he finally gave up after the last batch of charges.

      I mean, maybe it’s because they know him and feel sorry for him having seen him grow up and the trauma his family experienced when he nearly died after the accident. Still though, money afforded him that position and even broke they still have it in a sense.

      Anyone else would have been buried under the jail for what he’s done. I mean, I feel bad for him, but a line has to be drawn somewhere and the entire local small town system has pretty much let him run wild with these delusions because they know his family so well.

      It’s a mess.