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![]() Florida leads in sending young people to prison for life without parole...for nonhomicide crimes. Florida is unique in this tendency, the figures are alarming. Other states might do it, but not with the same intensity. There is a case pending before the Supreme Court in November to address this issue. The director of a legal aid group who is a lawyer for one of these juveniles summed up the situation well way down in the article. "Our argument is not that these kids can't be punished, can't be sent to prison for a very long time," Stevenson said. "But to make a judgment that their sentences can never be reviewed for possible release is inconsistent with how we deal with kids in virtually ever other context." Florida Stands Apart in Sentencing of Juveniles Records indicate that Florida has sent far more juvenile criminals to prison for the rest of their lives for nonmurder crimes than have all other states combined. Florida has sentenced 77 young men to spend their lives in prison, without any chance of release, based on nonhomicide crimes they committed when they were 17 or younger, according to a preliminary study by Florida State University researchers. Six of those prisoners were 13 or 14 at the time of their crimes. A Herald-Tribune review of state records shows that in Florida, some juveniles were given life without parole for as few as one or two convictions of nonhomicidal crimes. Other findings about the sentences: Only Florida has sent juvenile criminals away for life for burglary, battery and carjacking. Twenty-four of the 77 juvenile lifers were convicted for burglary, like Graham. Forty-six juveniles in Florida were given life for armed robbery. "Florida's practice of sentencing juvenile offenders to life without parole for nonhomicide cases is unique among American states," said the preliminary research report directed by Paolo Annino, an FSU law professor who heads the school's Public Interest Law Center. Why is it happening in Florida? The state has made it easier to try juveniles as adults, while at the same time increasing the potential penalties for many crimes. Currently, Florida judges have the power to impose a life sentence without parole for more than 50 crimes. Many of the changes came in the 1990s, when Florida was hit with a highly publicized crime wave, including the killings of nine tourists in 1992 and 1993. A British tourist was killed during a robbery by a group of juveniles at an Interstate 10 rest stop in 1993 that drew international press attention. Florida is known for harsh sentences for people of all ages, though. Some are totally over the line. Harsh sentences given out in Florida One example I have mentioned before is the work-release inmate who smuggled eight cans of beer into prison on Christmas Eve and was sentenced to serve an extra 15 years. John E. Powell, 43 years old, who had been serving a sentence at the Lakeland Correctional Institution for bad checks and robbery, would have been eligible for parole next January. But on Monday, Judge J. Dale Durrance added 15 years to his sentence. Of course there is a way out if you know the right people in law enforcement. Overseeing the pretrial intervention program of the Polk State Attorney's Office, Arley Smith had the power to decide who violated conditions of the program and went to prison. Smith got caught on tape giving one of his charges money and telling her that she could pay him back with weekly sex. It would be the "same situation" he'd had with other young women, he confided, unaware that this woman's step*father was a cop who had arranged for her to wear a wire. With the recording of the sex-for-money deal in hand, the Lakeland police went to the Polk state attorney and said they wanted to continue surveillance of Smith and charge him. An assistant state attorney agreed, saying he saw a clear crime. But State Attorney Jerry Hill balked, worrying aloud that Smith — a close friend who had worked in his office for more than 20 years — may have been entrapped and could lose his pension. A few days later, the police chief ordered the undercover surveillance stopped. |
#3
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On Tue, 11 Aug 2009 09:44:32 -0400, H the K wrote: Florida leads in sending young people to prison for life without parole...for nonhomicide crimes. I guess they are trying to say, if you want to be a criminal, do it somewhere else. I doubt any these "kids" were first offenders and "kids" are becoming a lot more violent. We have a few going up forever as we speak. They committed a ritualistic torture murder of 2 other kids and all of them are not actually charged with the homicide. That doesn't mean they weren't guilty. I'm sorry life in prison is all we have to offer these weasels. I was thinking more like the last 10 minutes of Braveheart would be more appropriate. http://www.winknews.com/news/local/50160142.html Harry's just a bigot. |
#4
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![]() "H the K" wrote in message m... Florida leads in sending young people to prison for life without parole...for nonhomicide crimes. I think you should be sent to jail for life, just for being stupid. As far as I know, you haven't killed anyone either. --Mike |
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