C
CWBetts
Guest
Again, you use the most extreme possible example and present it as the norm. This is not a good defense. What if I were to ask if a death row inmate displayed genuine conversion, and prison guards, the warden, and even the victim’s family begged for the sentence to be commuted to life without parole, should the person still be executed? Unfortunately this is not hypothetical. It happened in Texas. This person was still executed. I will not entertain ant of your hypotheticals. My situation was not a “what if” tilizing the most notorious murderer in history. This was a real person who was in reality murdered. She was a benefit to the prison she was in. She counseled other inmates. But the need for “justice” outweighed any of this in the eyes of the governor.I would like to ask the following to anyone on this post on the death penalty: If in fact we had caught, Hitler, and I’d like anyone to answer the question DIRECTLY, …IF we had caught Hitler, and if you had been on the jury at the Hague, assuming sufficient proof, would you have sentenced Hitler to death. (like the other Germans were.) Is there anyone who says that they would NOT have voted to execute??
Answer the question yes or no.
