Posted on May 15, 2015
SGT Signal Support Systems Specialist
24.9K
237
173
22
22
0
Ass
DEATH!

I think this is the most Awesome news for a Friday! I think he deserved it and the Jury got it right! Justice has prevailed!!

Showed little or no emotion. Has this "I'm better than thou" persona. Didn't feel any remorse about what he did or who he killed. You can read what he wrote inside the boat and tell that. This is a time that I wish someone could be killed more than once. Especially for that kiddo.

And yes, or course the appellant process will cost tax payers money, but it would cost more keeping this ass alive.

What say you? Did they get it right?

http://bigstory.ap.org/article/4d639808d3544bd3827881a45e6c7bdf/deliberations-continue-marathon-bombing-penalty-phase
Posted in these groups: Seal 443 tcm3 27739 BostonDeath penalty logo Death PenaltySafe image.php Terrorism
Edited 9 y ago
Avatar feed
Responses: 70
SGT Jeremiah B.
14
14
0
I generally oppose capital punishment because of how often we get it wrong. I don't think I'm going to object in this case.
(14)
Comment
(0)
SGT Jeremiah B.
SGT Jeremiah B.
9 y
CPT Jack Durish, I'm not going to lie. It is utterly illogical. My principle, in general, is that capital punishment is wrong for a number of reasons. In this case, where a father had to choose to abandon a dying child to go to his other seriously wounded one, I find it a tad bit harder to hold an uncompromising grip on that principle. While I think Life would be the much harsher sentence and provide a long-shot for redemption, I can't find the energy to invest in advocating that position here.

I think it's because I'm a parent.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SGT Michael Touchet
SGT Michael Touchet
9 y
I'm sorry but this goes to the very point that capital punishment is necessary. It is just an unfortunate necessary evil!
(1)
Reply
(0)
MSgt Brian Welch
MSgt Brian Welch
9 y
SGT Jeremiah B. I understand your reservations toward capital punishment. Especially, when there's the chance we get it wrong but I'm having a hard time with your justification of it being ok in this case because "a father had to choose to abandon a dying child to go to his other seriously wounded one". What if we still had it wrong? Or what if we had it right but the father had two dead sons and didn't have the same impact? Either you are for it when we get it right or you are not. If it was my child killed by a terrorist or just indiscriminate killer and he was evidenced as the one I'd hope you as a juror would do justice. I'd do it for your son if the evidence was bullet proof. Is life only worth a punishment of death to you if it's in the context of the Boston City Marathon bombing or 911? Sounds harsh but I think it's a fair question considering I've sat on a jury of a murder trial.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SGT Jeremiah B.
SGT Jeremiah B.
9 y
MSgt Brian Welch
That's a fair question - As I said, it's not a rational statement. You could even go as far as saying it's a bit of a moral failure on my part. If the exception to the principle is purely emotional, what's the point?

As for how I, as a jury member, would vote in the case of your child...complicated question - What IS justice? Just because we say an action demands death, does it? What's the value of mercy? History is full of murderers that went on to do great things because they repented and turned their life around. So how do I handle it? I honestly don't know. I know for a fact that I can kill someone, so that's not the problem. If guilt is clear (and I mean outrageously clear), given the choice between death and freedom, I would probably vote death. If I was in that grey area between Absolute certainty and "reasonable doubt," it would be a much harder decision. What I would never do is exonerate someone simply to get them out of the death penalty.

Fortunately, conviction and sentencing are usually two different phases.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
1px xxx
Suspended Profile
Edited 9 y ago
SGT (Join to see). Nation-State sanctioned death is never an easy thing . . . and to be honest I know far too little about the facts behind this verdict . . . but what I know is this person intentionally caused far more death, disfigurement, pain, and suffering to far more people . . . if we were not so terribly nice and civilized as a society then we would kill him by slow torture using progressive fully conscious vivisection . . . until there are no detectable bits and/or pieces of him to bury. Regrettably, we are a terribly nice and civilized society. Warmest Regards, Sandy
SGT Signal Support Systems Specialist
SGT (Join to see)
9 y
Those were the factors, exactly, that caused them to give him the death penalty. The "I was a little impressionable boy" didn't work.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SFC Joseph James
SFC Joseph James
9 y
You're all right 1LT Sandy Annala!
(1)
Reply
(0)
1px xxx
Suspended Profile
9 y
I think a bomb should be strapped to a leg and blow it off so he can bleed out rather than lethal injection.
2LT Irene Mason
2LT Irene Mason
9 y
I think the reason for death hinged on the fact he's a danger to society. No matter where you put him he could still inflict harm on others.
(0)
Reply
(0)
CPT Quartermaster Officer
7
7
0
Maybe Kim Jong-Un was onto something with the whole 'anti-aircraft fire execution' thing.... ?
(7)
Comment
(0)
SGT Infantryman (Airborne)
SGT (Join to see)
9 y
CPT (Join to see) , sounds good to me Sir. Lol
(1)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close