Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
Your entire post is off topic, start your own thread and it is race bashing/baiting as well.
OP, the answer to your question is no, all criminals should be treated the same.
My post is not off topic, and it is proven. The criminal justice system does not treat men and women the same. Women receive little to no time for committing the same crimes that put men behind bars for years. I am sorry that reality upsets you.
Very interesting responses. But if there is one crime women most certainly get preferential treatment on it's when they have sex with underage boys. Take the case of Debra Lafave:
Lafave had sexual intercourse, including oral sex, with the student on four different occasions.[3] In May 2004, the boy and Lafave went to see his cousin in Ocala. His aunt was alarmed at seeing him in the company of a provocatively-dressed woman, and alerted his mother. Under intense questioning from the boy's mother, he admitted that the woman was Lafave. Officers in Temple Terrace recorded conversations between Lafave and the boy, then arrested her at their next meeting. Two separate sets of charges were filed, because the alleged incidents occurred in both Riverview, in Hillsborough County, and Ocala, in Marion County.[4] A trial date was set after the prosecution and defense could not agree on a plea bargain that involved prison time. Lafave faced a sentence of 5-to-15 years for each of the two counts for which she was accused.
Quote:
With her guilty plea, LaFave effectively ended her teaching career. As part of her plea agreement, she surrendered her teaching license, and no state will grant a teaching credential to a convicted felon. Under the terms of her probation, she had to be home by 10 p.m. every day, could not leave Hillsborough County without a judge's permission, and could not be around children. She also had to register as a sex offender.[4][7] There was widespread skepticism as to whether a man guilty of lewd or lascivious battery would have received equally mild treatment.
Quote:
With her guilty plea, LaFave effectively ended her teaching career. As part of her plea agreement, she surrendered her teaching license, and no state will grant a teaching credential to a convicted felon. Under the terms of her probation, she had to be home by 10 p.m. every day, could not leave Hillsborough County without a judge's permission, and could not be around children. She also had to register as a sex offender.[4][7] There was widespread skepticism as to whether a man guilty of lewd or lascivious battery would have received equally mild treatment.
In pretty much every similar case women get a slap on the wrist compared to what a man would have gotten under the same scenario, wouldn't you agree?
No way. But don't like blaming women who protect themselves from a88 holes and then end up with the charge. We know women die all the time because of domestic abuse, but if they get back at the dude, they get charged. It's unbalanced - Only thing I question.
The Camorra are more like America's Crips and Gangster Disciples than they are like the Sicilian mafia or the American La Cosa Nostra (which was derived from the Sicilian mafia).
The Camorra are called "mafia" because they are white. If they were black they would be called "a gang."
The Camorra are very well organized though. But their organization is loser like the Crips and Gangster Disciples. And they let in children and teens like the Crips and Gangster Disciples.
The Camorra, Southern Italy, are supposedly culturally more "showy" like Black-Americans and Latinos, strutting around like peacocks and flaunting their wealth. This was one complaint about the New York John Gotti, that his roots were in Southern Italy, Naples, and that showboat culture and not in the more restrained Sicilian culture.
So one thing I am especially curious about women's thoughts over, what are your thoughts on women that have managed to successfully use being on their period as a defense? Do you really feel that a woman being on her period should mitigate anything bad she does?
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.