It’s not a good time to…
I think we can all agree that it’s NEVER a good time to be a CP defendant, but this week it’s really not a good time to be one. Or is it not such a bad week? I can’t tell.
There have been so many times during this week’s Supreme Court nomination hearings that I’ve cringed. If they are giving Judge Brown Jackson such a hard time over her sentencing decisions in CP cases, I can imagine Judges all over the country are probably looking at their CP defendants and thinking, ‘I better give this person the statutory maximum 20 years or it could one day be me getting skewered.’
Or, am I just conditioned to believe that things can only get worse and its possible that people watching this spectacle are thinking maybe someone should take a closer look at the guidelines if so many Judges think they are too harsh? Maybe judges are seeing the prospective Supreme Court Justice’s sentencing history in CP cases as validation of their own misgivings against giving someone more time for looking at pictures on the internet than committing the underlying crime?
Please don’t take these thoughts as any suggestion that viewing CP is not horrible. We all agree that it is and that any illegal activity is wrong and should be punished. This is merely a commentary on the current sentencing guidelines and whether certain enhancements (such as use of a computer) are truly deserving of a more serious sentence, or if they have become inherent in most offenses.
For better or worse, sentencing guidelines in CP cases were forced back into the spotlight this week and either this will expose a grievous injustice in some of the sentencing enhancements that are contained in the guidelines or it will cause congress to make laws harsher and enact higher minimum mandatory sentences because there’s a perception that people are not getting enough time.
What do you think will come from this week’s exposure?
I saw comments (Reddit?) that suggested that they block the hash of the illegal material instead of using it as a honey pot.
I find the congressmen’s slander of calling those charged with CP as “predators” and “pedophiles” disheartening. I can’t speak for everyone, but I never molested anyone or have any urge for a child. My problem, too, is that those of us charged w/CP sharing or possession are treated like we haven’t been punished already, even after getting out of prison. I could sling dope, have someone get addicted and ruin their life, get caught, be unapologetic in the least, do my skimpy time in prison, and everyone welcomes me…even if it was my 5th or 6th time. Sit at home alone, look at illegal porn, get arrested, do prison, do 5+ year probation, never commit another crime…always a pariah.
I think filtering this stuff off the net would keep many would be offenders from ending up in legal jeopardy. Think of all the destroyed lives that could be saved from this fate. Sounds like a no brainier.
Will this stop all CP? Of course not, but it would make a clear distinction between those who stumbled into the wrong side of the web and those determined to perpetuate sexual harm on children.
CP has become a buzz word for anyone arrested or convicted being accused of being a predator or pedophile; which more than likely isn’t true. Not all CP are prepubescent children, but they are all minors under the law. Are sentences ridiculous in CP cases? Yes it’s insane to read people being sentenced for decades or more time than other heinous crimes.
I find it ironic that Republicans are banishing the nominee; while being numb on the conviction and upcoming sentencing of Josh Duggar. Senators Cotton, Cruz, Rubio, Paul, and others have had their pictures taken with him. When an average American gets arrested those same Senators call them pedophiles and predators.
Time to stop using a broad brush to paint everyone in Blanket shades of punitive punishment. At least have a rational conversation without emotions.
There’s an old saying: “me thinketh thou protests too loudly.” Some like that. It means the ones who spout off at the mouth like some we’ve seen in this week’s hearing are the ones who have the most sins or skeletons in their closests.