tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37949944.post1215908681676789719..comments2023-05-05T07:13:41.889-04:00Comments on Corruption-free Anguilla: TortureUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37949944.post-70208093455479526082010-06-09T11:26:08.130-04:002010-06-09T11:26:08.130-04:00The below link leaves little to wonder why they di...The below link leaves little to wonder why they did not step in when the layers are pealed back.<br /><br />http://www.clarkprosecutor.org/html/death/US/alderman1120.htm<br /><br />Along with an accomplice, Alderman beat his wife Barbara Alderman with a crescent wrench, then choked her and put her under water in a bathtub to be sure she was dead. The men then visited two Savannah bars before dumping her body in a creek near her family’s home in Rincon. The motive for the murder was life insurance money from a policy supplied by her employer, the City of Savannah. After 33 years, Alderman was believed to be the country's longest-serving death row inmate. His conviction and death sentence was overturned by a federal appeals court, but was reinstated after a second trial in 1984. Accomplice, John Arthur Brown, who testified against Alderman at trial, was originally sentenced to life, but was paroled in 1987 and committed suicide in 2000 when police tried to arrest him on child molestation charges.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37949944.post-82661192455044739412010-06-09T07:30:04.651-04:002010-06-09T07:30:04.651-04:00It’s interesting to note that the US Supreme Court...It’s interesting to note that the US Supreme Court seems to have no such scruples as the UK Privy Council does with its automatic reprieve after five years. In 2008 Jack Alderman was executed in Georgia after having spent more than 33 years on Death Row. That’s effectively a life sentence followed by a death sentence, both carried out, a punishment almost bizarre in its cruelty.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37949944.post-32749710217836580422010-06-08T23:05:22.085-04:002010-06-08T23:05:22.085-04:00Discipline of any sort is always subjective to non...Discipline of any sort is always subjective to non-disciplined party, and always too harsh to the one being disciplined. I suspect the victims families of the Aruban van der Sloot, would judge his disciplinary treatment not as torture; by what ever the means of extraction was used to obtain the confession or the conditions which await him in the Lurigancho prison. For that matter, were we to walk a mile in their shoes, could we honestly say otherwise? Yet we can and freely make judgments on the harshness of discipline meted out by others. As they say “one mans terrorist is another’s freedom fighter” and “one mans torturer is another’s information extractor”.<br /><br />“Cruel and inhuman punishment” now there is a phrase invented by an enlighten society. Many things taken in isolation seem right and fair, but when applied liberally in varying situations, fall short of the mark. For speeding infractions, surely we can agree 14 yrs on death row is a bit over the top and would fit as Cruel and inhuman punishment. But as society grows ever more depraved and the B&W lines between right and wrong just become shades of grey; eventually everything becomes Cruel and inhuman punishment, if you’re the one being disciplined. However, if we take another mile stroll in the shoes of the victim’s families again, they are the ones receiving the Cruel and inhuman punishment for being denied justice for 14 yrs. It’s the same for society, having to bear the cost of that charade under the delusion of humane treatment. <br /><br />If a rotwiller mauled a person to death, would it live out the week? Would we try to retrain its mind to be kinder and then release it to see if we were successful? Would we put it in a cage for 14 yrs because we are too indecisive to deal with the problem? Why would we handle these situations differently? If we dealt with them in the same swift manner, perhaps society would then place its conduct on a shorter leash and would shape up.<br /><br />Torture against ones own citizenry should (except in extreme cases) not be tolerated as its use can lead to abuses. But to reject its use out of hand is to live in a fantasy land, in which the world is still flat and if we sail beyond the horizon sea dragons will eat us, "hic sunt dracones" beware.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com