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I remember some folks, mostly those back before the ACA, suggesting theyâd need to become a convicted felon in order to get the medical care they needed, but couldnât afford. This guys freedom is gone, but health care, meals, housing, heating/air and utilities are all taken care of. Except for the decor, it sounds like a free rest home.
Right up there with those multiple life sentences, they dish out on individuals. Itâs nice to see the courts imagining numbers like âa gazillion billion zillion.â
Too close to reality to be funny. In Washington State a twenty year old was sentenced to 150 years for a gang shooting (of the wrong person who wasnât in a gang), with no possibility of parole.
dadthedawg Premium Member about 2 years ago
See, the judge is congenialâŠ..
Yakety Sax about 2 years ago
Canât do the time? Donât do the crime!
Ichabod Ferguson about 2 years ago
âJust do the Best You Can,â the old âCountryâ Johnny Mathis song (the country/western singer not pop singer).
WilliamWilliam about 2 years ago
Is that Senator Belfry
Doug K about 2 years ago
âGive it all you got.â
preacherman Premium Member about 2 years ago
I remember some folks, mostly those back before the ACA, suggesting theyâd need to become a convicted felon in order to get the medical care they needed, but couldnât afford. This guys freedom is gone, but health care, meals, housing, heating/air and utilities are all taken care of. Except for the decor, it sounds like a free rest home.
[Traveler] Premium Member about 2 years ago
Watch for it on the next addition of Dateline
oakie817 about 2 years ago
ba dum tss
eric_harris_76 about 2 years ago
Canât do the time? Donât be innocent and the prime suspect, when in a dishonest jurisdiction.
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=the.innocence.projecthttps://duckduckgo.com/?q=Steven.Hayne https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Michael.West
rshive about 2 years ago
Nor will he be able to pay his lawyer.
paranormal about 2 years ago
You should have thought about that before you got yourself convictedâŠ
stamps about 2 years ago
Donât sign up for any longevity experiments.
petermerck about 2 years ago
If he dies in his cell, just leave him there until his sentence is up.
The Sinistral Bassist Premium Member about 2 years ago
Typical idea of modern âjusticeâ
Buckeye67 about 2 years ago
Donât worry about being able to live out your sentence, the state throws in a free cremation as part of the deal.
eced52 about 2 years ago
I would say you will live out your life there regardless.
michael3114 about 2 years ago
De facto death sentence.
cuzinron47 about 2 years ago
In that case, weâll make it a life sentence.
ekke about 2 years ago
Actually, this isnât a joke; this is a real story from British jurisprudence. Very slightly different wording, however.
RabbitDad about 2 years ago
With good behavior weâll let you out in 50.
ArcticFox Premium Member about 2 years ago
Cosmo and shoe are astounded at the brilliance of the judge.
jmcenanly about 2 years ago
Is that Senator Belfrey?
Billy Yank about 2 years ago
This is definitely a repeat and I have no idea how old the original version was.
EnlilEnkiEa about 2 years ago
Right up there with those multiple life sentences, they dish out on individuals. Itâs nice to see the courts imagining numbers like âa gazillion billion zillion.â
GreggW Premium Member about 2 years ago
Too close to reality to be funny. In Washington State a twenty year old was sentenced to 150 years for a gang shooting (of the wrong person who wasnât in a gang), with no possibility of parole.
cosman about 2 years ago
The deal wouldâve been sealed if the Judge had said, â60 years and a wake up.â