Film, Media & TV1 min ago
Britain retains Paedophile, why?
14 Answers
http:// www.tel egraph. ...rbou r-paedo phile.h tml
We continue to operate a police presence outside a foreign embassy, ready to arrest a supposedly rapist and then extradite him to Sweden, and yet we refuse to extradite a paedophile to America.
Why the double standards?
We continue to operate a police presence outside a foreign embassy, ready to arrest a supposedly rapist and then extradite him to Sweden, and yet we refuse to extradite a paedophile to America.
Why the double standards?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well this is a really poor article isn't it?
It looks like the concern is about this "civil commitment" thing the Americans have going on.
I had to go and read another website to try to find out what that is because the Telegraph didn't seem to want to burden me with pertinant facts.
http:// www.doc .wa.gov ...s/ci vilcomm itment. asp
It looks like civil commitment is a process whereby after someone's done his time in prison the state can apply to a court to say that they're still a threat and should continue to be locked up indefinately.
If I've got that right it raises questions about the case - like whether he's actually completed his sentence - if not why is civil confinement an issue?
The matter of continuing to imprison someone after they've served their sentence because you've 'changed your mind' about them is a worrying one - we do something similar with IPP cases but those are sentences imposed at the time of the original court case so are subtly different.
It looks like the concern is about this "civil commitment" thing the Americans have going on.
I had to go and read another website to try to find out what that is because the Telegraph didn't seem to want to burden me with pertinant facts.
http://
It looks like civil commitment is a process whereby after someone's done his time in prison the state can apply to a court to say that they're still a threat and should continue to be locked up indefinately.
If I've got that right it raises questions about the case - like whether he's actually completed his sentence - if not why is civil confinement an issue?
The matter of continuing to imprison someone after they've served their sentence because you've 'changed your mind' about them is a worrying one - we do something similar with IPP cases but those are sentences imposed at the time of the original court case so are subtly different.
This is nothing more than blatant abuse of reporting by the Telegraph. The article actually says that this individual is wanted in the States "on suspicion" of abusing teenage girls. He has not even been tried. Therefore referring to him as a "paedophile" is completely wrong.
Much though I wish every padophile to be strung up by the testicles, they at least need to be first convicted as such. Otherwise, all law abiding people would just descend to being nothing better than lynch mobs and vigilantes ourselves.
Much though I wish every padophile to be strung up by the testicles, they at least need to be first convicted as such. Otherwise, all law abiding people would just descend to being nothing better than lynch mobs and vigilantes ourselves.
bazwillrun
/// According to some on this board only the Daily Mail indulge in such practices, not an upmarket broadsheet.....whod a
thought it ?! ///
It's got nothing to do with what the newspaper is called, ie Daily Mail/Telegraph etc, it is all right-wing news sheets the left would wish to see the end of.
/// According to some on this board only the Daily Mail indulge in such practices, not an upmarket broadsheet.....whod a
thought it ?! ///
It's got nothing to do with what the newspaper is called, ie Daily Mail/Telegraph etc, it is all right-wing news sheets the left would wish to see the end of.
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