Most of the families wanted the death penalty, but some of them wanted life.
lethalninja said:
You said his judge is very talented, but she's never presided over a death penalty trial before this case, so they should have picked a judge with more experience instead of her being randomly assigned to the case.
Which ones wanted life? No one who spoke today for sure.lethalninja said:
Most of the families wanted the death penalty, but some of them wanted life.
lethalninja said:
She's decent looking, but better looking than a lot of judges.
He won't. This guy has no conscience. He won't suffer.annie88 said:
I'm perfectly happy with the death penalty but I think he'll suffer more being in prison the rest of his life.
He's very young.
I guess I'm weird then because if you're putting me in a prison for the rest of my life where I can never open the door for myself, do what I want to do and possibly be in a cell up to 23 hours a day? I would not care for that. I would think just his lack of freedom would be a form of suffering.redcrayon said:He won't. This guy has no conscience. He won't suffer.annie88 said:
I'm perfectly happy with the death penalty but I think he'll suffer more being in prison the rest of his life.
He's very young.
Me, too. But he's actually told people that jail isn't bad. He's not normal. He'll probably enjoy the attention like he has during this sentencing trial.annie88 said:I guess I'm weird then because if you're putting me in a prison for the rest of my life where I can never open the door for myself, do what I want to do and possibly be in a cell up to 23 hours a day? I would not care for that. I would think just his lack of freedom would be a form of suffering.redcrayon said:He won't. This guy has no conscience. He won't suffer.annie88 said:
I'm perfectly happy with the death penalty but I think he'll suffer more being in prison the rest of his life.
He's very young.
I watched the sentencing trial.lethalninja said:
Comment if you actually read the mitigating factors, cause I'm curious if anyone reads them.
They chose life because ONE juror wouldn't engage in deliberations. You don't need a couple of lawyers who weren't in the jury room to guess why they chose it. The foreman already told us.lethalninja said:
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.wptv.com/news/parkland-shooting/why-did-jury-choose-life-in-prison-for-nikolas-cruz%3f_amp=true
A law professor and a defense attorney not associated with the case explain why he got life instead of death
So she says now. Still curious if this was the same woman who was questioned live in court by the judge.lethalninja said:
There were three jurors that voted against the death penalty, but one was more vocal than the others, and she wasn't against the death penalty in general, she was against it for people that are mentally ill.
I know what he said. She was the ONE who wouldn't deliberate. If she couldn't give the DP, she should have disclosed that in voir dire.lethalninja said:
Benjamin Thomas was the juror that said three jurors were against the death penalty for Nikolas Cruz, not the juror who said mentally ill people shouldn't get the death penalty. When she said that, she probably meant people that have been diagnosed with a mental illness, not murderers in general.
I forgot about this thread. That is a good question. I am not sure if I care one way or the other as long as he is away from society.lethalninja said:
In solitary confinement or general population? Or either one?
Take heart a shank is in this punks future.lethalninja said:
There were three jurors that voted against the death penalty, but one was more vocal than the others, and she wasn't against the death penalty in general, she was against it for people that are mentally ill.
Not necessarily. That's definitely not automatic in Florida.lethalninja said:
Wouldn't he be in solitary confinement, since he's at risk from the other inmates because he killed children?