SteveGrabowski
Diamond Member
- Oct 20, 2014
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Wow big surprise, alleged murderer a student in criminal justice and criminology. So probably preparing to be a cop.
maybe he thought that background would let him get away with it.Wow big surprise, alleged murderer a student in criminal justice and criminology. So probably preparing to be a cop.
Apparently, they treat the accused in the state of Idaho with kit gloves.Press conference now in progress.
Maybe Pennsylvania will squeeze out SOMETHING!Arrest warrant can’t be unsealed until suspect is extricated back to Odaho
By the way, I thought I screwed up, but it can be kit or kid. (young fox/young goat)Apparently, they treat the accused in the state of Idaho with kit gloves.
Basically, no info other than his name, and that he had an apartment in Pulman.
It is an extreme high profile case and those prosecutions are often fraught with jury pool problems. I suspect they will do everything they can to plug all the loopholes to get a successful prosecution.Apparently, they treat the accused in the state of Idaho with kit gloves.
Basically, no info other than his name, and that he had an apartment in Pulman.
Thanks. More than a scintilla of information that came from the useless press conference. I guess that's what bugs me the most. Should have only lasted about 5 minutes. Instead, they spent most of the time patting themselves on the back.View attachment 73690
View attachment 73691
From https://www.cnn.com/us/live-news/idaho-university-student-murders-update-12-30-22/index.html
Hmm that last paragraph is perplexing.. did he really try to get willing victims to do what I think he did??
He was trying to get people to submit their personal stories to fuel his study.View attachment 73690
View attachment 73691
From https://www.cnn.com/us/live-news/idaho-university-student-murders-update-12-30-22/index.html
Hmm that last paragraph is perplexing.. did he really try to get willing victims to do what I think he did??
His white Elantra was seen there. They have his DNA from the crime scene. It's him.I get it, that’s the lawyers job. But my client looks forward to proving his innocence. Sure this case is far from an open and shut case but will how methodical this investigation went, really think they covered their bases to prove guilt.
What? But how can you possibly make that determination before he’s been tried and convicted?! Innocent until guilty? Have to wait until all the evidence comes out! What about the lying press! What about his rights?!His white Elantra was seen there. They have his DNA from the crime scene. It's him.
They got him basically the same way they got the California serial killer ex-cop, mining DNA databanks with samples they got at the scene of the crimes. They got hits of relative(s), worked up family tree(s) of those people and exhaustively researched the hits. In this case, one owned a white Elantra and lived near the crime scene. He became suspect #1. They found where he was living and copped some of his DNA somehow, maybe they already had it from another source. Bingo! They had their man. Guilty in MY mind, lots more info to come as he's processed, returned to Idaho, etc.What? But how can you possibly make that determination before he’s been tried and convicted?! Innocent until guilty? Have to wait until all the evidence comes out! What about the lying press! What about his rights?!
Oh wait I thought this was about:
Nevermind. Dude is totally guilty unless……
- Trump and the FBI @ mar a lago
- Ahmuad Arbery case
- Kyle Rittenhouse
….hey does anyone know how conservative he is?
As the Western Rationalists of Dostoevsky's day missed their reflection in Crime an Punishment, I think you might have missed this as it's real point:He was trying to get people to submit their personal stories to fuel his study.
He was seeking participants for a research project "to understand how emotions and psychological traits influence decision-making when committing a crime."
I saw more on this on ABC network news last night. He assured participants that they would be anonymous in their contributions to the study.
I have to wonder. Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment is about a man with a fascination for this kind of idea. What happens in the mind of the perpetrator of a crime, in particular murder. The character commits a murder, thinking he could escape the consequences of his conscience if he was sufficiently aware of his emotions, sufficiently in control (Aside: I have never succeeded in getting past the beginning of this book of which I have a copy, but I know some of the basic ideas involved). In the book, the central character commits a murder thinking he had the mental power necessary, but it turns out he cannot escape the consequences of his actions. I don't remember ever hearing of something happening "in real life" like Dostoevsky's novel. I have to wonder if he read it. Obviously, he too has failed to escape the consequences of his actions. I suppose his motivations may become more clear in time. Maybe he is similar to Raskolnikov, Dostoevsky's protagonist.
From the Wikipedia treatment of Crime and Punishment:
Raskolnikov (Rodion Romanovitch) is the protagonist, and the novel focuses primarily on his perspective. A 23-year-old man and former student, now destitute, Raskolnikov is described in the novel as "exceptionally handsome, taller than average in height, slim, well built, with beautiful dark eyes and dark brown hair." On the one hand, he is cold, apathetic, and antisocial; on the other, he can be surprisingly warm and compassionate. He commits murder as well as acts of impulsive charity. His chaotic interaction with the external world and his nihilistic worldview might be seen as causes of his social alienation or consequences of it.
Despite its title, the novel does not so much deal with the crime and its formal punishment as with Raskolnikov's internal struggle – the torments of his own conscience, rather than the legal consequences of committing the crime. Believing society would be better for it, Raskolnikov commits murder with the idea that he possesses enough intellectual and emotional fortitude to deal with the ramifications, but his sense of guilt soon overwhelms him to the point of psychological and somatic illness. It is only in the epilogue that he realizes his formal punishment, having decided to confess and end his alienation from society.
He looks like an uglier Jake Gyllenhaal.Have you seen the weirdo in custody?
He looks mentally ill just to look at.
Let me tell you a secret a wise person managed to get to me. "The answer to a fool (or to fools for that matter) is silence, but experience has shown that in the long run any other answer will have the same effect."HOLY WALL OF TEXT^^^^
above two posts
@Moonbeam nobody is reading that. Far too much info for a forum post.
I recommend trimming that to a short paragraph or better a few sentences.
Not when 90% of the stuff you add to your posts isn’t needed. Getting to the point better than being a fortune cookie.Often the value of things comes from the effort to achieve them. I read a lot of words before I learned that though I was doubtless told so early on.
This is EXACTLY whatI was going to doNot when 90% of the stuff you add to your posts isn’t needed. Getting to the point better than being a fortune cookie.
Not when 90% of the stuff you add to your posts isn’t needed. Getting to the point better than being a fortune cookie.
Unfortunately I’m not a professional copy editor, but all this gibberish could probably have been said in 2 sentences and without using need 9xDo you post what I think is needed?
*snip*