There is certainly no guarantee anyone will convert or if already a Christian repent and confess but in jail they still have the opportunity to do so. Its not up to you or anyone to say they should have repented by X number of years and if they have not done it by then that’s too bad for them.
You seem to be of the opinion that unless someone is given life in prison they will not have the chance to repent. I have no earthly idea where you came up with that one. That has to be one of the biggest stretches I have ever heard. And sadly a very very naive view.
The problem with life in prison is that it generally does not rehabilitate, it only succeeds in making the convicted more and more bitter towards those he feels wronged him. Very few criminals truly repent of their crimes, very few indeed Thistle. I know that sounds hard, but I learned that lesson in over 30 hard years of police work. I saw lengthy prison sentences do nothing more than create virtually soulless beings who didn’t really care what happened to them or to anyone else. They would terrorize the prison population and staff as surely as they did those on the outside.
Example.One Federal Penitentiary, Marion Illinois. In the Federal System of the United States the death penalty was not allowed… A convicted murderer and bank robber took offense at one of the correctional officers and decided to kill him. This was after he had already killed two other men, both inmates, while in Federal Custody. While in maximum security lock down , he made arrangements with other members of the Aryan Brotherhood, a violent prison gang, made up in large part of convicted murderers, robbers, kidnappers, rapists and drug dealers serving lengthy prison sentences, to assist him in killing the guard.
One morning in a perfectly timed assault, during shower time, he succeeded, stabbing the guard over sixty times… Fearing what would happen if they locked down the entire institution after this event, things were allowed to continue as usual, with only the killer and some of the Brotherhood locked up in segregation.
Later the
SAME day, a second inmate, a member of the Brotherhood, and also a convicted murderer, both in and out of prison, and bank robber, virtually duplicated the earlier assault and killed a
second guard, bragging afterwards that he had plenty more bodies to collect and that no one was going to get ahead of him in the body count.
Had the death penalty been imposed on these men for their earlier murders, perhaps the murders of these two correctional officers might have been avoided. Maybe not, but maybe.
We do know for certain that the violent tendencies of these men were more than likely exacerbated by the lengthy terms they were sentenced to and the knowledge that
nothing they did could increase their sentences, as they were never getting out anyway.
Example Two: Federal Penitentiary Leavenworth, Kansas a convicted murderer and rapist serving a life sentence, became aggravated at the staff psychologist who was treating him. He decided to rape her. He went to the Office but she wasn’t there but another staff member, unknown to the man was. Seeing an opportune moment, he raped her, and then decided to strangle her. Unable to strangle her, he got a knife and decided to cut her throat. Unable to get the knife in he took a mop wringer handle and beat it into her neck. He then sliced her from ear to ear, then went back to his cell and apparently sexually gratified himself. When caught he said that he really didn’t plan to kill her but he figured why not. He couldn’t receive a stiffer sentence so in effect he was immune from punishment.
These type of events are not uncommon Thistle, and are in part a byproduct of warehousing these extremely violent individuals for lengthy terms of incarceration with little or no hope for parole and no fear of ever receiving worse punishment It has been pretty much shown that those on Death Row do not engage in these activities in any where near the numbers of those who are serving life or extremely lengthy terms of imprisonment. I have several friends who worked death row in two California State Prisons and they reported that the men whose appeals were done and who knew they were going to die were by and large better behaved, more reflective. more subdued. much more remorseful and much more likely to have a religious experience and or conversion than those serving life.
Predators prey upon those they can and when they can. Almost all violent criminals are predators, Thistle. Thats the real world…