The
courts should punish the guilty according to the nature of the crime.
12:50-1:20
From the beginnings of human civilization, there has been
the eternal question of how to handle or punish criminals accordingly? In
Ancient Mesopotamia, there were many strict rules in place to maintain order in
society and to those who broke the laws would be punished according to the Code
of Hammurabi. This Code of Hammurabi enforced the idea of eye for an eye law
that implied that a crime should be punished with severing a body part or
confiscating a possession that was responsible for the crime. However, laws
such as this are only practical in today’s drastically changing society for
certain situations but for other cases another approach must be taken.
First consider when courts must consider the nature of the
crime and punish the guilty accordingly. In the days after the most horrific
terrorist attack on American soil, 9-11, many people were angered and
frustrated to bring the terrorists responsible for killing innocent family
members and citizens to justice. Although, many terrorists perished in the
attacks, other officials from Al Qaeda and the Taliban were brought to justice
for direct involvement with the crime. For example, Osama Bin Laden was
recently killed in Pakistan
during an army raid for finding insurgents and top Al Qaeda criminals. The
death and murder of Osama Bin Laden was considered a way to bring justice to
those who perished on 9-11. Another example, is the actions of Saddam Hussein
and Chemical Ali in Iraq.
Both men were accused by an international court of law and the United States of committing genocide of
thousands of Kurds and minorities in Iraq over the past few decades.
Both Chemical Ali and Saddam Hussein were brought to justice and sentenced to
death for their crime after being informed of their accusations. Likewise, in
1993 Timothy McVeigh, was responsible for the Oklahoma City bombings and pleaded guilty to
multiple counts of manslaughter thus was sentenced to death by lethal
injection. All these example show that a crime must be punished without
exception due to the cold nature of the criminals.
On the other hand, consider when courts must consider the
nature of the crime as well as the circumstances that led to the crime to
punish the guilty. In recent decades, the US court system has offered a
chance for criminals to seek the insanity plea as a way to admit their crime. This
involves cases where a defendant is deemed to be clinically insane and not
appreciate or understand the wrongness and nature of his crime. While the court
may deem a defendant "not guilty" due to his mental condition, the
dangerous person will be confined to a psychiatric hospital for an indefinite
period of time. For example, in the San Francisco
bridge case that involved the drowning of 3 boys by Lashuan Harris who admitted to tossing her sons down the Golden Gate Bridge but had not mental recall of
doing so. She was defended by an attorney that she was not clinically sane
at the crime scene. She was issued a lighter sentence due to this plea and was
issued a mandatory psychiatric evaluation for mental illness. Harris was not
allowed to be out in public and not released from the psychiatric treatment
unless she could prove that she is mentally sane. As a result, this shows that
circumstances were taken into consideration before punishment.
All in all, it is circumstantial to punish the guilty
depending on the nature of the crime. If a criminal intentionally commits a
crime and knows it is wrong then they have no excuse and must be punished
accordingly. However, if a person who is insane, such as Harris must be given a
second chance to correct her actions to be a contributor to society. In a
system that offers innocent before proven guilty, multiple view points must be considered.
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