After losing his bench in a Democratic sweep the night before, Harris
County Juvenile Court Judge Glenn Devlin released nearly all of the
youthful defendants that appeared in front him on Wednesday morning,
simply asking the kids whether they planned to kill anyone before
letting them go.
“He was releasing everybody,” said public
defender Steven Halpert, who watched the string of surprising releases.
“Apparently he was saying that’s what the voters wanted.”
Waiting for this to be used in a statistical study in 6 years showing it was a net benefit.
I would not be shocked. Years ago I read a bunch of papers about the juvenile justice system (I wish I could remember where), and found that every single traditional sentence/intervention is counterproductive. However punitive they are or aren’t, they all involve putting teenagers who have committed crimes in the same place as a lot of other teenagers who have committed crimes; it’s not too hard to figure out why that’s a bad idea.
the tags on this post are a fucking gift:
I was like “oh wow, what a great example of a Republican don’t the right thing, good for him! ….wait, he was trolling??”
Yato, who so desperately clung to his existence for over 1,000 years, is willing to throw it all away to protect the ones he loves. He thinks so little of himself that he thinks a reincarnated version of himself would be better for his adopted son. In his whole life he’s never been loved, and he doesn’t realize how much he’s loved now.
Friendly reminder that Artemis Fowl literally donated a hugeass amount of his money to his already richass all-boys school–anonymously–with the deal that his whole year will go on a field trip all the way to friggin Germany just so he can sneak away from the whole group to rob the most secured bank in the world undetected by his parents.