'Struck by Justice: The Impact of Polly Klaas'
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- Опубликовано: 10 мар 2024
- This month, California marks 30 years since the adoption of the Three Strikes and You're Out Law. abc7ne.ws/43aF8LH
A new ABC7 News Originals documentary "Struck by Justice: The Impact of Polly Klaas" looks at how the kidnapping and murder of Polly Klaas brought about an era of tough on crime policies, mass incarceration and eventually criminal justice reform.
#pollyklaas #threestrikeslaw #massincarceration #criminaljustice #abc7news
The system is a joke
I was working at the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco at the time. Polly’s father, Marc Klaas, worked at the Hertz desk. Everyday I’d walk by, and he was always friendly. I remember coming to work that morning, and I didn’t see him. My boss then told me the shocking news that his daughter had been kidnapped the night before. It still makes me want to cry.
Did he eventually return to the job?
@@ThePeterDislikeShow, no he never did. He started the Polly Klaas Foundation not too long afterwards.
Poor girl the story breaks my heart.
Polly would be 43 years old
She was just 12 a child as well taken too soon on 1st october in 1993
All these criminals get no sympathy from me. Who cares if they suffer in prison. They made wrong choices
It is seriously sad
Sorry but i dont believe in rehabilitation. A person will change if they want to and if they dont nobody can rehabilitate them.
Murder is unforgivable. Even if they change, that wouldn't bring back the murdered victim They are GONE forever!
Where can I watch Richard Allen Davis' Full interrogation interview? I can't find it anywhere.
So how's is it working out right now in the Bay?
You can't say someone hasn't committed another serious crime since release because you don't know what they may have done and not been caught for.
Too bad Polly's name is attached to this video. The video started off being enlighteneing but ended up just pissing me off, toward the end.
Might be a good idea to point that the drug trade is alive and well at San Quentin.
Do we think there could be a way to rehabilitate the dead bodies that some of these "rehabilitating" inmates at San Quentin has created??
What's not being told is all the other damage that comes with the comitting of a crime which does not exceed $950 - creating mayhem, broken windows, injured employees, shaken bystanders, instillation of fear about who may be next, etc.
Because the criminal justice system seems to be breaking down, one may have to dread the prospect of what individuals may resort to, to restore justice. I.E., vigilantism.
Struck by Justice? I don't see any Justice because of the fact that Polly's killer is still breathing!
Anyway people goodbye and goodnight now's bedtime.
I wonder if the Western society is normal or the Eastern (China, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan) society is normal?
Poor girl the story breaks my heart.