Neurognosis
Science in general will be the majority of my work here but much focus will be on neuroscience, psychology, neurobiology, evolutionary biology, and palaeoanthropology. There will also be ample dose of personal adventures and trials posted.
About Crobar


Real Name:
Cory Overby
Member Since:
October 10, 2007
Last Signed In:
September 03, 2008
Profile Views:
465
Blog Views:
1089
View Profile
Send a Message
Send To A Friend
Sign Guestbook
Add as a Friend

Previous Posts
Neanderthal mtDNA genome sequenced
Farewell George...
I learned something just now...
Platypus Genome
Wow, so, it's been a busy time...
...it's been a while...
Busy, busy...
Pre-Cambrian Explosion?
Insight into the neurobiology of Boderline Personality Disorder
Kiss and run and Festivus for the rest of us...
Archives
October 07
November 07
December 07
January 08
February 08
March 08
April 08
May 08
June 08
July 08
August 08
September 08
Subscribe!
RSS 2.0 feed RSS 2.0
Add to My Yahoo
Add to My Google
Add to Bloglines
Add to My AOL
Crobar - > Neurognosis -> Just when I think the idiocy has subsided...
Just when I think the idiocy has subsided...
I see something that infuriates me and is nothing more than an overt perversion of legislation meant to protect not prosecute horny teens.  It's nice to know that there is some semblance of logic in Georgia by having his sentence overturned.  However, it taking two years for this to happen is obscene.

Once our courts were envisioned as halls of justice to punish those who have committed a crime and punish them accordingly.  I suppose it's more about conviction numbers for DAs than it is justice anymore.  Or maybe it was because he was black and she was white?  It is the south and old prejudices do die hard.  Or it could be just the clutches of this country's Puritanical roots?  Whatever the reason, it was overkill and the kid shouldn't have even been in prison at all, he never should have even had to walk into a court room for something like this.  The time, money and resources that were consumed in this poor boy's ordeal could have supplied more funding, time and manpower to catch real criminals - sometimes I wonder about people's priorities.

I'm glad the kid is finally free but his life severely impacted by carrying the stigma of that initial conviction even though it was overturned.
Tags:
posted by Crobar on Friday, November 2, 2007 at 01:00 PM
Report a Violation
Viewed 24 times
0 comments from 0 users

Leave a Comment
Ground Rules for posting comments:
  • No profanity or personal attacks.
  • Please comment on the subject of the blog post itself.
If you do not follow these rules we will remove your comment. Please keep it civil.

To protect users from spam, we need you to prove that you're a human being.
Please enter the text from the image at left.