The Garda Siochana - Protectors of the Peace - are not part of the justice system. The Justice system brings justice to bear upon those that have already committed a crime. It is up to the Gardai to protect society - theoretically, people are not locked up to stop them from offending again, but as punishment for doing so. Unfortunately (fortunately?) we don't live in a society where the Gardai can be everywhere at once so the justice system is seen as serving a role the Gardai have responsibility for.I should rephrase that. The kind of people he's talking about, when they've gone that far, no, they don't change. Either they were born or raised in some way that resulted in them having little or no conscience or they have had serious psychological damage to go from a normal personality to a murderous one - Cymro even suggesting that serial killers might just be under pressure!but at least after they commit a crime. Are you really saying that a justice system shouldn't try to rehabilitate anybody in their prisons on the basis that 'people don't change'?
(yes, i've moved relevant sentences next to each other, don't take it as attempting to take them out of context) Then as you say, if it only causes harm to the victims, again, and is probably a personality disorder which cannot be cured, why bother?I have no doubt that the victim of their family will never be able to think of the offender as anything other than a rapist, and I have no doubt that the release of the offender would be another terrible, terrible trauma for them.
Note - with crimes like rape, and particularly paedophilia, where the issue of whether or not it is a 'sickness' that the criminal themself cannot control, I am in favour of keeping them in prison possible indefinitely.
Sure, if someone is an addict or a pimp or a tax evader or a violent drunk - if a panel judges that they seem to have reformed, give them a go. These are the situational crimes that Cymro has somehow mixed rape and cold blooded serial killing in with.However, I don't think that alone is enough to keep a person in prison if qualified psychologists (or similar people) have come to a conclusion that the criminal is no longer a danger to society.
My first concern is to protect society, but I believe that rehabilitation is a way to do that.
Bookmarks