Post by jamiestrickland on Feb 17, 2021 16:58:24 GMT
1. Doris Drugdealer was convicted of felony drug possession and sentenced 10-20 years in prison. She escaped after less than year and was able to evade capture for 34 years. During this time, she married, had kids and becoming an upstanding citizen. Unfortunately, authorities were able to catch up to her and now plans to send her back to carry out her sentence.
2. Doris was naïve teenager, strapped for cash and ultimately ended up getting mixed up with the wrong crowd. For the amount of drugs, she was in possession of she was received a harsh sentence of 10-20 years. Prison was not a place for her so feeling that there was no other option she needed to escape. Since dedicating her life to improving herself and the community around her. Her contributions to society make her a model citizen and with her in prison those contributions stop.
3. Doris is a good mother, devoted wife and woman of integrity. He only knows her to be that way and does not want to look at her for her past. The lie does affect the family but despite the secret she’s a new person and has been since the day they met.
4. Same with the father, Doris is a loving and supportive mother. She pushes her kids to be their very best and stay out of trouble as best she can. To have her in prison will only destroy the family.
5. The neighbors see her as she’s as model mother. Nothing really too different from the family just her neighbors experience her differently one from the outside looking in and for the family within.
6. The legal issues are she committed a crime and was convicted, then committed another crime by escaping prison. The societal issues are poor systems that force kids into lives of crime specifically kids who are living in poverty. The other is the severity of the sentence, she was handed a heavy sentence for minimal drugs. Did the crime match the punishment?
7. Although I am not a proponent of lengthy sentences for anyone who is arrested for the distribution drugs that do not make them rich and feel her sentence was too severe. I believe prison is not meant to reform people as they say it is supposed to it doesn’t. Prisons are just money-making schemes and a means for cheap labor. The point is her sentence should have been much shorter. But she escaped prison at the end of the day, and there was no predictor that would have said she wouldn’t have returned to a life of where she sold drugs. The point is she should be returned to prison for some time to serve her sentence in hopes that appeals and/or clemency will be granted. There are so many unknowns here but the unfortunate truth is that sentencing is always bias and trials are as well.
2. Doris was naïve teenager, strapped for cash and ultimately ended up getting mixed up with the wrong crowd. For the amount of drugs, she was in possession of she was received a harsh sentence of 10-20 years. Prison was not a place for her so feeling that there was no other option she needed to escape. Since dedicating her life to improving herself and the community around her. Her contributions to society make her a model citizen and with her in prison those contributions stop.
3. Doris is a good mother, devoted wife and woman of integrity. He only knows her to be that way and does not want to look at her for her past. The lie does affect the family but despite the secret she’s a new person and has been since the day they met.
4. Same with the father, Doris is a loving and supportive mother. She pushes her kids to be their very best and stay out of trouble as best she can. To have her in prison will only destroy the family.
5. The neighbors see her as she’s as model mother. Nothing really too different from the family just her neighbors experience her differently one from the outside looking in and for the family within.
6. The legal issues are she committed a crime and was convicted, then committed another crime by escaping prison. The societal issues are poor systems that force kids into lives of crime specifically kids who are living in poverty. The other is the severity of the sentence, she was handed a heavy sentence for minimal drugs. Did the crime match the punishment?
7. Although I am not a proponent of lengthy sentences for anyone who is arrested for the distribution drugs that do not make them rich and feel her sentence was too severe. I believe prison is not meant to reform people as they say it is supposed to it doesn’t. Prisons are just money-making schemes and a means for cheap labor. The point is her sentence should have been much shorter. But she escaped prison at the end of the day, and there was no predictor that would have said she wouldn’t have returned to a life of where she sold drugs. The point is she should be returned to prison for some time to serve her sentence in hopes that appeals and/or clemency will be granted. There are so many unknowns here but the unfortunate truth is that sentencing is always bias and trials are as well.