I'm ok with this as long as the start charging the FBI for doing the exact same thing to innocent people. But i digress.
aggiehawg said:Agree that was very likely to be ruled reversible error. No way to cross a diary.Quote:
A big issue for appeal here is that they used accounts from Ethan's diary which were introduced to show his parents ignored his mental health issues. He wrote that they wouldn't help him. The problem is the judge let the state present those written statements without letting the defense call him as a witness. It was all hearsay. Teenagers write all sorts of crap in their diaries that is overemotional and isn't in line with reality.
Are the mothers giving them the guns? If yes, then we should!TAMU1990 said:Lots of crime committed by POC in cities. Are we really going to lock up the mother?StandUpforAmerica said:
So will we start applying the same standard to other violent crimes committed by teenagers?
State gets immunity!BQ78 said:
They also sent him back to school when he was threatening to shoot up the place.
School has some culpability in letting him come back.
There isn't much difference between this negligence and what we see daily in the cities of this country.AtticusMatlock said:
The state alleged that not only did the parents know he had mental disturbances, they ignored them, purchased him the firearm, and kept it in a place where he could easily access it. One of the things the state and judge both brought up in sentencing was that they were not being charged for merely being bad parents or because their son did something horrible but rather they were charged because of their extreme level of negligence.
A big issue for appeal here is that they used accounts from Ethan's diary which were introduced to show his parents ignored his mental health issues. He wrote that they wouldn't help him. The problem is the judge let the state present those written statements without letting the defense call him as a witness. It was all hearsay. Teenagers write all sorts of crap in their diaries that is overemotional and isn't in line with reality.
tysker said:
What's the value to society by imprisoning the parents for a decade?
What are the taxpayers going to get in return?
Are these two going to be better parents when they get out?
tysker said:
What's the value to society by imprisoning the parents for a decade?
What are the taxpayers going to get in return?
Are these two going to be better parents when they get out?
AgsMnn said:
Now do the parents of the 13 YO in SA that shot a man for his car.
Maybe the value is to make other parents be more responsibletysker said:
What's the value to society by imprisoning the parents for a decade?
What are the taxpayers going to get in return?
Are these two going to be better parents when they get out?
I have no idea what this post is about but based on facts in the quote above, I am NOT ONBOARD with this.2040huck said:
How do you feel about this? It is my understanding that they knew the kid was kinda crazy, and still bought him a gun as a gift. Is this really a reason to throw them in jail for 10 years? It wasnt illegal for him to own a gun as I understand it
Quote:
Every kid I've ever worked with going back to 2000 has parents/guardians complicit in their crimes.
BrazosDog02 said:I have no idea what this post is about but based on facts in the quote above, I am NOT ONBOARD with this.2040huck said:
How do you feel about this? It is my understanding that they knew the kid was kinda crazy, and still bought him a gun as a gift. Is this really a reason to throw them in jail for 10 years? It wasnt illegal for him to own a gun as I understand it
He can legally own it.
I've bothered to read several links to the news stories that have all said the same thing, that is indifferent and absent parents ignoring their child's behavior. Or is it solely the purchasing of a firearm? What about parents who didn't buy their child a gun, but ignore that they are in their possession? What about parents of kids who record their illegally owned firearms on social media and not only ignore it, but promote it?Im Gipper said:
If you believe this:Quote:
Every kid I've ever worked with going back to 2000 has parents/guardians complicit in their crimes.
Then it is very evident you have not bothered to read the facts of this case.
I think this is a very tough issue. Definitely room for reasonable people to disagree on what the crime, if any should be.
But can we please stop all the histrionics that ignore this particular fact pattern?
ABATTBQ11 said:BrazosDog02 said:I have no idea what this post is about but based on facts in the quote above, I am NOT ONBOARD with this.2040huck said:
How do you feel about this? It is my understanding that they knew the kid was kinda crazy, and still bought him a gun as a gift. Is this really a reason to throw them in jail for 10 years? It wasnt illegal for him to own a gun as I understand it
He can legally own it.
Not as a minor in Michigan. His parents must own it, but they can allow him to use it. What they did is buy and effectively give it to him, though they maintained "ownership" of it and supposedly kept it secure.
Quote:
As for him being tried as an adult, that's kind of irrelevant. He could be reasonably expected to have an adult level of understanding of his crimes, considering his age and notes/drawings. That's why he gets tried as an adult. His parents still bear a lot of responsibility for him as a minor, especially when it comes to regulating his access to a gun in their house. He can't just go out and buy that weapon, so they bought it for him and failed to secure it.
91AggieLawyer said:Quote:
As for him being tried as an adult, that's kind of irrelevant. He could be reasonably expected to have an adult level of understanding of his crimes, considering his age and notes/drawings. That's why he gets tried as an adult. His parents still bear a lot of responsibility for him as a minor, especially when it comes to regulating his access to a gun in their house. He can't just go out and buy that weapon, so they bought it for him and failed to secure it.
You can't say on one hand that the parents have some sort of a duty that, when breached, rises to the level of gross negligence then on the other hand try him as an adult. He's either a minor with respect to all his actions or he's not. The state shouldn't be able to pick and choose what parts of the law he's a minor on and what parts he's an adult on. That's the definition of an unconstitutionally vague statute.
BrazosDog02 said:ABATTBQ11 said:BrazosDog02 said:I have no idea what this post is about but based on facts in the quote above, I am NOT ONBOARD with this.2040huck said:
How do you feel about this? It is my understanding that they knew the kid was kinda crazy, and still bought him a gun as a gift. Is this really a reason to throw them in jail for 10 years? It wasnt illegal for him to own a gun as I understand it
He can legally own it.
Not as a minor in Michigan. His parents must own it, but they can allow him to use it. What they did is buy and effectively give it to him, though they maintained "ownership" of it and supposedly kept it secure.
Ok. Then I chance my stance. I havnt even heard of this situation and thus don't know any facts. From what you say, they are responsible as well.
Still awaiting the headline "Black Parents affected most."2040huck said:
How do you feel about this? It is my understanding that they knew the kid was kinda crazy, and still bought him a gun as a gift. Is this really a reason to throw them in jail for 10 years? It wasnt illegal for him to own a gun as I understand it
agree. If I knowingly gave a a drunk person there keys whom consumed large amounts of alcohol that I provided at my home and the went and killed someone, it's partially on me.MouthBQ98 said:
Well, I can see it both ways. If you supplied a disturbed adult with a weapon knowing odds were fairly high that could have a deadly outcome for the public given the history of that person, the liability would seem to be the same. There is the issue of legal adulthood regarding culpability and legal age to purchase and /or possess certain firearms depending on the state.
I'm not a lawyer, so I'm curious about this part. If the prosecution is asserting the defendant is mentally disturbed, how is what that mentally disturbed person wrote in a diary used as credible evidence for anything?aggiehawg said:Agree that was very likely to be ruled reversible error. No way to cross a diary.Quote:
A big issue for appeal here is that they used accounts from Ethan's diary which were introduced to show his parents ignored his mental health issues. He wrote that they wouldn't help him. The problem is the judge let the state present those written statements without letting the defense call him as a witness. It was all hearsay. Teenagers write all sorts of crap in their diaries that is overemotional and isn't in line with reality.
And grandparents as well. The percentage of households in which the black father is not in the home exceeds other races and I suspect the brushes with the law for the offspring in those situations does as well. It often transcends generations. Are those parents and grandparents creating an environment that causes higher incidences of crime? Is the black father guilty because he wasn't in the home to parent his own children?Logos Stick said:
Will this apply to black parents too?