• @[email protected]
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    282 months ago

    Twice as long as the homeless man, yes.

    The difference in dollars and impact though, and considering who turned themselves in… It’s still an egregious sentence for $100.

    • @[email protected]
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      42 months ago

      It wasn’t the amount - It was the “who” that the homeless person robbed. He didn’t steal from a local liquor store or 7/11. He robbed from a bank. And bank robbery, since the time there have been banks to rob from, has always carried certain heavy punishments. And the punishments are well known to even a homeless person. And very often the judge gets no choice or leeway in the sentencing.

      • @[email protected]
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        102 months ago

        And TB&W also stole from banks through fraud.

        The judge isn’t the issue being called out, the laws and associated punishments are.

        So… yes. And my point stands.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        And the punishments are well known to even a homeless person.

        The bootlicking condescension is strong here.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 months ago

      you can’t easily or directly compare the monetary value of violent vs non-violent crime. Robbery is not about the money from a severity perspective. Any robbery will be much more heavily punished than a theft of the same monetary value due to the violence or threat of violence agaist the person or people.

      If you stick a gun in someones face and ask them for one cent, you still should be going to jail for a decent amount of time - way more than shoplifting a 500 dollar tv.

      15 years does seem a lot though, you might have expected them to at least wave the weapon around, or put it direct to someones head, or put a knife to the throat - that doesn’t seem to be the case here. but if it were less than 5 , I’d think they’d got off lightly for robbery.

      The homeless guy should have shoplifted food from grocery store - not gone and threatened someones life.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        That’s certainly quite the interpretation of what happened when Roy Brown went into the bank, said “this is a stickup” with no weapon, was handed three stacks of bills, took a single $100 bill, handed the rest back and said “Sorry, I’m homeless”.

        In other words, not remotely what you described.

        Goodbye.