Adam Weinberg
Goldwater Republican
http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/05/17/scotus.sex.offenders/index.html?hpt=T1
A federal measure authorizing the government to retain a sex offender indefinitely after their sentence has already ended has been upheld by the court with a 7-2 vote.
You might wonder, who are these two crazy, liberal, activist judges who want dangerous sex offenders out on the streets?
Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia.
Nobody wants dangerous people on the streets, but does anyone else see the inherent danger in the federal government having the power to indefinitely detain prisoners after their sentence has expired?
If that danger is clear at sentencing, wouldn't the judge assign a longer sentence, or couldn't a judge order additional probation or other guidelines for after their release to mitigate the danger they pose to others?
Remember, this is a measure fought for and defended by President Obama's "liberal" solicitor general and Supreme Court nominee.
Nobody wants these people walking the streets, but nobody should want to open up the possibility that any one of us could rot in prison indefinitely and unconstitutionally on account of being "too dangerous".
It's worth remembering that in an authoritarian country, it would be easy to accuse dissidents of sexual crimes in order to undermine their resistance to the government.
A federal measure authorizing the government to retain a sex offender indefinitely after their sentence has already ended has been upheld by the court with a 7-2 vote.
You might wonder, who are these two crazy, liberal, activist judges who want dangerous sex offenders out on the streets?
Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia.
Nobody wants dangerous people on the streets, but does anyone else see the inherent danger in the federal government having the power to indefinitely detain prisoners after their sentence has expired?
If that danger is clear at sentencing, wouldn't the judge assign a longer sentence, or couldn't a judge order additional probation or other guidelines for after their release to mitigate the danger they pose to others?
Remember, this is a measure fought for and defended by President Obama's "liberal" solicitor general and Supreme Court nominee.
Nobody wants these people walking the streets, but nobody should want to open up the possibility that any one of us could rot in prison indefinitely and unconstitutionally on account of being "too dangerous".
It's worth remembering that in an authoritarian country, it would be easy to accuse dissidents of sexual crimes in order to undermine their resistance to the government.
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