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        <title>Just when I think the idiocy has subsided... - Neurognosis - Crobar&apos;s Blog - Victoria Advocate</title>
        <link>http://community.victoriaadvocate.com/home/Blog/Crobar/5556</link>
        <description>I see something that infuriates me and is nothing more than an overt perversion of legislation meant to protect not prosecute horny teens.&amp;nbsp; It&#039;s nice to know that there is some semblance of logic in Georgia by having his sentence overturned.&amp;nbsp; 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.&amp;nbsp; I suppose it&#039;s more about conviction numbers for DAs than it is justice anymore.&amp;nbsp; Or maybe it was because he was black and she was white?&amp;nbsp; It is the south and old prejudices do die hard.&amp;nbsp; Or it could be just the clutches of this country&#039;s Puritanical roots?&amp;nbsp; Whatever the reason, it was overkill and the kid shouldn&#039;t have even been in prison at all, he never should have even had to walk into a court room for something like this.&amp;nbsp; The time, money and resources that were consumed in this poor boy&#039;s ordeal could have supplied more funding, time and manpower to catch real criminals - sometimes I wonder about people&#039;s priorities.

I&#039;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.</description>
        <itunes:summary>I see something that infuriates me and is nothing more than an overt perversion of legislation meant to protect not prosecute horny teens.&amp;nbsp; It&#039;s nice to know that there is some semblance of logic in Georgia by having his sentence overturned.&amp;nbsp; 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.&amp;nbsp; I suppose it&#039;s more about conviction numbers for DAs than it is justice anymore.&amp;nbsp; Or maybe it was because he was black and she was white?&amp;nbsp; It is the south and old prejudices do die hard.&amp;nbsp; Or it could be just the clutches of this country&#039;s Puritanical roots?&amp;nbsp; Whatever the reason, it was overkill and the kid shouldn&#039;t have even been in prison at all, he never should have even had to walk into a court room for something like this.&amp;nbsp; The time, money and resources that were consumed in this poor boy&#039;s ordeal could have supplied more funding, time and manpower to catch real criminals - sometimes I wonder about people&#039;s priorities.

I&#039;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.</itunes:summary>
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