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| Thread ID: 117952 | 2011-05-12 00:38:00 | Are we supposed to feel sorry for him? | Zippity (58) | PC World Chat |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1201634 | 2011-05-15 23:27:00 | .............for it which I am not inclined to do from past experiences. Care to elaborate? |
Zippity (58) | ||
| 1201635 | 2011-05-15 23:52:00 | While I can sympathise with your sentiments there the trouble is other people have had there whole lives ruined because of remote chances. You forgot all about the Swedes. |
prefect (6291) | ||
| 1201636 | 2011-05-15 23:57:00 | Care to elaborate? So you took it personally which it was not meant. To give you an example. I have a sister in law who has a habit of bring a third party into an argument. The only trouble is the third party isn't there so is totally irrelevant. |
mikebartnz (21) | ||
| 1201637 | 2011-05-15 23:58:00 | You forgot all about the Swedes. No I didn't. Possibly convicting the wrong person is not going to bring them back. |
mikebartnz (21) | ||
| 1201638 | 2011-05-16 00:19:00 | This is him prior to killing the swedes Tamihere had skipped bail for a 1986 rape and was on the run when the Swedish murders were committed. He also had a manslaughter conviction for the 1972 death of an Auckland prostitute. Any half decent country would have executed him for these crimes alone. He deserved nothing more than getting his neck stretched. |
prefect (6291) | ||
| 1201639 | 2011-05-16 00:30:00 | This is him prior to killing the swedes Tamihere had skipped bail for a 1986 rape and was on the run when the Swedish murders were committed. He also had a manslaughter conviction for the 1972 death of an Auckland prostitute. Any half decent country would have executed him for these crimes alone. He deserved nothing more than getting his neck stretched. I knew he wasn't a saint and deserves a stretched neck but you obviously haven't considered the fact that if it was an incorrect conviction the actual killer is still roaming free. |
mikebartnz (21) | ||
| 1201640 | 2011-05-16 00:31:00 | .................Possibly convicting the wrong person is not going to bring them back. Tamihere certainly doesn't fall into that category. Even 1/2 ounce of lead would be wasted of this piece of vermin :mad::mad: |
Zippity (58) | ||
| 1201641 | 2011-05-16 00:53:00 | Tamihere certainly doesn't fall into that category. Even 1/2 ounce of lead would be wasted of this piece of vermin :mad::mad: Rope is cheap and with the scaffold the filthy crooks have to expend their own energy to get to the top for the fall. A good gallows should last hundreds of years if it is under cover |
prefect (6291) | ||
| 1201642 | 2011-05-16 00:53:00 | Tamihere certainly doesn't fall into that category. Even 1/2 ounce of lead would be wasted of this piece of vermin :mad::mad: I think you are letting emotions control your thinking. It horrifies me as to just how many people have been incorrectly convicted in the past. The number that have managed to get off their convictions since DNA evidence has appeared is rather large in the USA. I would be interested to see how the French rate on that considering they don't use the confrontational courts we do. Here it seems to be a competition between the two opposing lawyers rather than the aim being to find the truth. |
mikebartnz (21) | ||
| 1201643 | 2011-05-16 00:57:00 | Rope is cheap and with the scaffold the filthy crooks have to expend their own energy to get to the top for the fall. A good gallows should last hundreds of years if it is under cover That is easy to say when it isn't your neck in the noose. I think it was the last person that was hung in England turned out to be innocent. |
mikebartnz (21) | ||
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