02-26-2015, 12:06 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-26-2015, 12:41 AM by Lunarscope.)
Twitter questions to Troy' and/or Jeff, one of many!
@jeffgoldesq @troyhaydenfox10 disagree with you Jeff ...explain why Marissa DeVault in General Population (Same Arizona prison) few months and already working!
DeVault = same Arizona prison' less than a year after convicted for hammer murder one!
Quite a few were asking today, troy and/or Jeff (after saying he would check and see) said their are three Maximum Security classifications and that Jodi would be in maximum security for 2 years minimum. Seams like it was for 5 years = reported days earlier!
4 hours 20 minutes of deliberations and jury went home!
If the jury evidence is stockpiled then deliberations must be in a courtroom, (not a deliberations room) both trials would be a large stockpile of paperwork alone, the jury must be wanting to dismiss any failure to take due diligence arguments by not swiftly deciding, as I had hoped!
First jury asked an important unanswered question = "what does Life mean" and a Arizona judge not exacting an answer became problematic!
My discussion was Arizona and US Prisons, USA life sentence from Wiki!
Life imprisonment (also known as a life sentence, lifelong incarceration or life incarceration) is any sentence of imprisonment for a serious crime under which the convicted person is to remain in prison for the rest of his or her life or until paroled. Crimes for which a person could receive this sentence include murder, attempted murder, severe child abuse, rape, espionage, high treason, drug dealing, vandalism, human trafficking, severe cases of fraud, aggravated criminal damage in English law and aggravated cases of arson, burglary or robbery resulting in death or grievous bodily harm.
This sentence does not exist in all countries. Portugal was the first country in the world to abolish life imprisonment by the prison reforms of Sampaio e Melo in 1884. However, where life imprisonment is a possible sentence, there may also be formal mechanisms to request parole after a certain period of imprisonment. This means that a convict could be entitled to spend the rest of the sentence (until he or she dies) outside prison. Early release is usually conditional depending on past and future conduct, possibly with certain restrictions or obligations. In contrast, when a fixed term of imprisonment has ended, the convict is free.
The length of time and the modalities surrounding parole vary greatly for each jurisdiction. In some places, convicts are entitled to apply for parole relatively early, in others, only after several decades. However, the time until being entitled to apply for parole does not necessarily tell anything about the actual date of parole being granted. Article 110 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) stipulates that for the gravest forms of crimes (such as war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide), a prisoner ought to serve two-thirds of a fixed sentence, or 25 years in the case of a life sentence. The highest determined prison sentence that can be imposed in the ICC, aside from life imprisonment, is 30 years (article 77 1) a)). After this period, the court will review the sentence to determine whether or not it should be reduced.
The US has the world's largest population behind bars and leads in life sentences as well, at a rate of 50 people per 100,000 residents imprisoned for life.
@jeffgoldesq @troyhaydenfox10 disagree with you Jeff ...explain why Marissa DeVault in General Population (Same Arizona prison) few months and already working!
DeVault = same Arizona prison' less than a year after convicted for hammer murder one!
Quite a few were asking today, troy and/or Jeff (after saying he would check and see) said their are three Maximum Security classifications and that Jodi would be in maximum security for 2 years minimum. Seams like it was for 5 years = reported days earlier!
4 hours 20 minutes of deliberations and jury went home!
If the jury evidence is stockpiled then deliberations must be in a courtroom, (not a deliberations room) both trials would be a large stockpile of paperwork alone, the jury must be wanting to dismiss any failure to take due diligence arguments by not swiftly deciding, as I had hoped!
First jury asked an important unanswered question = "what does Life mean" and a Arizona judge not exacting an answer became problematic!
My discussion was Arizona and US Prisons, USA life sentence from Wiki!
Life imprisonment (also known as a life sentence, lifelong incarceration or life incarceration) is any sentence of imprisonment for a serious crime under which the convicted person is to remain in prison for the rest of his or her life or until paroled. Crimes for which a person could receive this sentence include murder, attempted murder, severe child abuse, rape, espionage, high treason, drug dealing, vandalism, human trafficking, severe cases of fraud, aggravated criminal damage in English law and aggravated cases of arson, burglary or robbery resulting in death or grievous bodily harm.
This sentence does not exist in all countries. Portugal was the first country in the world to abolish life imprisonment by the prison reforms of Sampaio e Melo in 1884. However, where life imprisonment is a possible sentence, there may also be formal mechanisms to request parole after a certain period of imprisonment. This means that a convict could be entitled to spend the rest of the sentence (until he or she dies) outside prison. Early release is usually conditional depending on past and future conduct, possibly with certain restrictions or obligations. In contrast, when a fixed term of imprisonment has ended, the convict is free.
The length of time and the modalities surrounding parole vary greatly for each jurisdiction. In some places, convicts are entitled to apply for parole relatively early, in others, only after several decades. However, the time until being entitled to apply for parole does not necessarily tell anything about the actual date of parole being granted. Article 110 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) stipulates that for the gravest forms of crimes (such as war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide), a prisoner ought to serve two-thirds of a fixed sentence, or 25 years in the case of a life sentence. The highest determined prison sentence that can be imposed in the ICC, aside from life imprisonment, is 30 years (article 77 1) a)). After this period, the court will review the sentence to determine whether or not it should be reduced.
The US has the world's largest population behind bars and leads in life sentences as well, at a rate of 50 people per 100,000 residents imprisoned for life.