life sentece..
living in the cell is the punishment for criminals.. let them suffer first while they're still alive.. i think it's better punishment than quick death..
Uyon
Dili uyon
life sentece..
living in the cell is the punishment for criminals.. let them suffer first while they're still alive.. i think it's better punishment than quick death..
who knows maybe a life sentence will bring about personal transformation for these hardened criminals.
mao sad lagi maka amgo ra if naa na sa cell...if mka gawas balik nasad sa bisyo...![]()
usahay makaingon ko na maayo ang Death penalty but usahay sad makaingon ko na sobra ra ang Death penalty. even sa dagkong nasud such as US for instance, naa man gyapon lapses ang ilang Justice system, how much more dinhi sa atong nasud?
iPriso nalang na cla then pasudlan ug mga bayot na dagkong lawas.. IPA-RAPE na cla arun magtagbaw.. hehehehe
this is one reason why life sentence is not justice enough (for some)...
full article : http://www.gluckman.com/Death'Penalty.htm
IN THE PHILIPPINES, inmates pay for their crimes in many ways. Cash-rich convicts buy deluxe cells with fans, televisions, stereos. Editha Matignas, 56, president of the Families of Death Row Inmates, has gone into debt to pay for her son Jemreich's trial and to keep him comfortable inside. His cell cost $68, plus $325 for the remodeling. So far she has spent over $3,000 in legal fees, but would gladly shell out a promised $1,350 bonus to the lawyer who can get her only son acquitted.
pero ang nakapait sa death penalty is that you can also bribe your way out of it.
although being poor is NOT an excuse to commit a crime.
full article : http://www.gluckman.com/Death'Penalty.htm
Everything is available for a price. "Except," says one prisoner, "justice." Actually, that too. Despite the lofty goal of Act 7659 - to attack corruption in high places, target drug lords, murderers and kidnap gangs - enforcement is clearly aiming low. "These are all poor people in Death Row," says Maria Diokno, head of the Free Legal Assistance Group (FLAG), which handles most last-ditch appeals for condemned men. Father Silvino "Jun" Borres, director of the Philippines Jesuit Prison Service, calls the Row a "home for the poor." A survey last year of 425 Death Row inmates showed that most earned less than $6 a day when they were arrested. Three-quarters of them were farmers, truckers, laborers and so on. Few can afford the $30 that attorneys charge to attend the death sentence hearings.
death penalty oi
wat if kamo ang na biktimahan den na patay.. dapat baws pod death penalty pod
death penalty
para nako death penalty... labina na kanang grabeh jud nga nabuhat krimen...
den kalagot rabag mga nawng labina sentensyahan na
ky magpaluoy-luoy dayon ang nawng.
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