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HER NAME WAS JUSTINE DIAMOND, SAY HER NAME

_glaciers

Bronze Knight
Feb 25, 2020
1,657
835
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xage8xh1nf871.jpg
 
LOL _glaciers is STILL on his "Chauvin will walk" kick I see. :)

Despite his crass attempt at race-baiting, justice was clearly served for both victims.
calm down, you and your 13 year old girlfriend get in another fight? lmao
 
Calm down? LOL YOU are the OP! I said justice was served.

Instead of posting race-baiting sh*t, how about sharing an ‘adult’ opinion on the subject you raised since you apparently disagree?
you took that "calm down" like a woman scorned lol
 
LOL _glaciers is STILL on his "Chauvin will walk" kick I see. :)

Despite his crass attempt at race-baiting, justice was clearly served for both victims.
If the OP is correct, don't you think both should have received the same sentence?
 
Turns out the story is true. The family got a 20 million dollar settlement from Minneapolis.
 
Uneven justice is why we have a really screwed up legal system.
The OP image vastly oversimplifies the totality of each case’s circumstances. In one case, you’ve got an officer obstinately maintaining a course of action that the jury found caused a death over a period of time where he could’ve made a different decision and maybe affected the outcome. He did this while some voices in the crowd were begging him to do something different. That qualified him for escalated sentencing for his convictions on 2nd and 3rd degree murder and manslaughter.

Mohammed Noor and his partner were about to clear off of a scene when they heard a loud thump and both drew their weapon. The partner didn’t fire but Noor did. He was spooked and reacted terribly. He was acquitted of 2nd degree murder but convicted of 3rd degree murder and manslaughter.

Bottom line: different convictions, different circumstances, and the video which affects sentencing are all clear reasons that anyone can understand lead to different sentences.
 
I have a friend who died alone overnight, in a ditch, because the sentence for turning oneself in for a Hit'n Run the day after is no more than 1/3rd the sentence for DUI involuntary homicide had he pulled over and called an ambulance to save my friend.

That's what lobbying does. It makes DUI offenses far worse than 'intentional' crimes, and causes worse outcomes as a result. That's why I've taken issue with many people here arguing DUIs need to be prosecuted even harder than they are.


Same concept here. Exact same. Lobbying changes things in the worse way. Tough on crime ends up being illogical.
 
The OP image vastly oversimplifies the totality of each case’s circumstances. In one case, you’ve got an officer obstinately maintaining a course of action that the jury found caused a death over a period of time where he could’ve made a different decision and maybe affected the outcome. He did this while some voices in the crowd were begging him to do something different. That qualified him for escalated sentencing for his convictions on 2nd and 3rd degree murder and manslaughter.

Mohammed Noor and his partner were about to clear off of a scene when they heard a loud thump and both drew their weapon. The partner didn’t fire but Noor did. He was spooked and reacted terribly. He was acquitted of 2nd degree murder but convicted of 3rd degree murder and manslaughter.

Bottom line: different convictions, different circumstances, and the video which affects sentencing are all clear reasons that anyone can understand lead to different sentences.
Conversely, you have a cop who pulled the trigger on a woman and then a cop who (maybe?) exacerbated an impending overdose death and was convicted in the court of media and public opinion before ever stepping foot in the court room.

The point of this is pretty clear, there was an unprecedented media circus behind Fentanyl Floyd's death, namely because the color of his skin, and a lack of such in the case because of the colors of their skin.
 
you have a cop ... convicted in the court of media and public opinion
The trial is long-gone but our resident toady troll is like a dog with a bone.

When Derek Chauvin inevitably walks...what's gonna happen? another 6 months of chimping out? its pretty obvious they overcharged, not going to get him on 2nd degree lmao
Gee, look who's still "chimping out" now? :)
 
Lobbying defined sentences, not consistency or equal application of the law.

DUI and under-influence offenses are perfect examples.
 
The trial is long-gone but our resident toady troll is like a dog with a bone.


Gee, look who's still "chimping out" now? :)
and yet, look how easy it was to rile you up on the subject. funniest part? even after a guilty conviction, they're still chimping out in MN.

keep bumping my thread to the top!
 
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