Showing posts with label Parole. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parole. Show all posts

Monday, October 3, 2011

Rehabilitation or Punishment?




By Heidi Hiatt
Necrophiliac.

Serial burglar.

Serial rapist.

Serial killer.

Has used knives, guns, and his body parts to violate the living and the dead.

Has said that he has an uncontrollable urge to kill.

Escaped from prison, broke into a home, tied up the male resident, and raped the man’s wife.

Was involved in the Attica prison riot.

Described by a DA as a “callous, vicious, violent man who is a serial rapist, burglar and multiple murderer” who has no “compassion or sorrow for his victims and is not capable of living a law-abiding life.”

With a resume like this, it is inconceivable that this psychopath could ever get out of prison, right?

Wrong.

Seventy-six year old Winston Moseley is up for parole for the 15th time. You may not know his name, but millions know the name of one of his victims, Kitty Genovese.

Forensic psychology students often study this case in detail because it is where the term “bystander effect” originates from. This case is extremely disturbing not only because a woman was raped and murdered, but because possibly dozens of people heard the attack and did nothing to intervene. They didn’t even call the police.

While the above information came from John Caher’s excellent article in the New York Law Journal via Law.com, most people who have studied this case can describe what happened from memory. You can’t forget it. Ever. The apathy involved is that tragic, because the victim could have lived.

http://www.newyorklawjournal.com/PubArticleNY.jsp?id=1202517412972&Law_Requires_Board_to_Assess_Rehabilitation_in_Parole_Rulings&slreturn=1

In mid-March of 1964, Kitty Genovese left the bar she managed and got out of her car to walk into her Queens apartment. Winston Moseley came out of nowhere and stabbed her twice in the back as she tried to run away. She screamed for help and he took off.

But he came back. Seeing that no one would intervene, he followed a trail of blood into a hallway where he raped her and stabbed her over and over, including in the neck so she couldn’t scream. Some reports say he kept returning until he was sure she was dead.

An estimated 38 people heard or saw the attack and did nothing. While that number is unsubstantiated, it is clear that there were witnesses and someone could have, at minimum, called the authorities. But Kitty Genovese, violated and mutilated, died alone and helpless because no one bothered to get involved.

According to John Caher:

A month earlier, according to the prosecution, Mr. Moseley broke into a home, shot a 24-year-old woman six times and had sex with her dead body. He later explained that he had an “uncontrollable urge to kill” and claimed to have committed at least five rapes and 35 burglaries before his encounter with Ms. Genovese, according to the Queen’s District Attorney’s Office.

Mr. Moseley was sentenced to the death penalty, although the sentence was reduced to 20 years to life.

Let’s review:

Necrophiliac.

Serial burglar.

Serial rapist.

Serial killer.

This brings us back to the age-old debate about whether our criminal justice system should be focused on rehabilitation or whether it should be focused on punishment.

Advocates of rehabilitation might point out that Moseley has earned a sociology degree while in prison and has worked as a teaching assistant (per the above article).

If he’s behaved in prison lately– I don’t know– they might argue that his good behavior has earned him the right to be free.

There could be a number of reasons– his age, changes he’s appeared to have made, recommendations from others, and so on– cited to justify his release.

But why is this about him? How does a deviant of this magnitude get away with 20 years to life? He should be castrated and put to death so that he is no longer a threat to society and there is no chance that he can escape and do this again. He is already a repeat offender.

Any possible good behavior inside prison walls doesn’t mean he will be able to withstand the pressures and temptations of the outside world in which he will once again be exposed to the targets of his sick hatred– women.

Can God forgive him for what he’s done? Yes He can. Some people would disagree with me but let’s not forget the two criminals crucified next to Jesus. One of them, at death’s door, became truly sorry for what he had done, and He was promised paradise.

But even if a hardened criminal has made things right with God, does that justify his release? No, by itself, it does not. Doesn’t he still have a debt to pay to society even if his slate’s been wiped clean with God? How heinous do a series of crimes have to be to keep someone locked up for life– for sure– or for them to receive the death penalty? It seems that our standards are slipping as we become more and more concerned about how the suspects are treated and forget the victims in the process. Perhaps Winston Moseley is of most use to God inside those prison walls.

Additionally, some psychopaths feign conversion and change to achieve that very goal, release. From my education I know that many psychopaths use their time in prison to study subjects relating to their internal conditions and sometimes get degrees in them. They can become model prisoners, seemingly benevolent and appearing to want to repay their debt to society.

It concerns me that sentencing and parole decisions are often made by well-meaning people who are not trained to recognize those dark souls who are unlikely to ever be truly reformed. This is why I repeatedly argue for the use of forensic psychologists in the criminal justice system– note that I said forensic, not just any psychologists. Many of them are trained to properly evaluate criminals and some can see through the smokescreens that psychopaths spew to appear “rehabilitated.”

I know very little about what Winston Moseley is like now at age 76. But how much does that matter? We know what he’s done. So the bigger issue is whether someone who has repeatedly taken precious lives, who has repeatedly sexually violated women, and who has repeatedly shown a total disregard for others’ property should be judged to have been properly punished and fit for release into a society that is half female.

Even if he is truly sorry– and it is wise to question if he has the depth to be truly sorry– the answer is a resounding, thunderous, cataclysmic, earth-shaking, shout out to all the murder and rape victims and survivors who are repeatedly faced with the possibility that their violators can achieve freedom through the farce that is parole– absolutely not.

I hope that Moseley can make things right with his Creator, I really do. I hope he knows that God still cares about him despite his heinous and unconscionable crimes. But the rest of society doesn’t need to be put in danger so that rehabilitation advocates can test whether he’s truly reformed or not.

How many more women have to be brutally raped and murdered before Moseley gets a life sentence?

***
For more information on the bystander effect, seehttp://helpingpsychology.com/bystander-effect-theory. The bystander effect means that the more people are present in an emergency situation, the less likely individuals are to act. People often assume that someone else has already called 911, for example, or that others present are more qualified to help the victim than they are. Never make these assumptions– call 911. Someone’s life could depend on it.

For an interview with Kitty Genovese’s partner, seehttp://soundportraits.org/on-air/remembering_kitty_genovese/transcript.php.


When we begin to draw our own line against evil behavior instead of hoping that someone else will, things can begin to change. –Henry Cloud

***

Heidi Hiatt, MA recently graduated as a Forensic Psychologist.  You can read more of her posts at her personal blog, Truth, Justice, and All-American Allergen-Free Apple Pie
Straight Talk in a Crooked World


Wednesday, February 3, 2010

No Chance of Parole for Victims!



By Sheryl McCollum

Do they think we forget? 

The "Onion Field"

It’s been 50 years since his crime.  Now he wants out of prison.  His victim is still dead!  He should still be in prison.  Cop killer Gregory Powell believes we are all stupid and have bad memories.  Thanks to Joseph Wambaugh’s best selling book about the crime no one should ever forget the horrifying details for a senseless crime. 

Does the passage of time lessen what they did?  I don’t think so.  In many ways it makes their crime sadder.  Think of all the missed events, weddings, babies, parties, birthdays, and new homes, first jobs, and loves. 

At 75 years old Powell wants to be set free to live out his life as he chooses, to visit with friends, loved ones and make new friends.  His victimOfficer Ian Campbell, was a police officer.  He was living his life to protect others, working a job not looking for a liquor store to rob.  Powell was pulled over by his victim.  It was a traffic stop.  Then during the stop Powell pulls a gun and everyone's life is changed forever.

One police officer is killed and one officer escapes to be haunted for the rest of his life by the events of that day.  Powell did not just make a quick mistake.  He drove the officers out of Hollywood to an onion filed.  He asked the officer a question about the “Lindbergh Law” and then shot him in the head.

Powell has been denied parole 11 times.  I have no doubt he will be denied again.  The issue here is that these killers believe they should be set free and the system is set up where they can actually attempt to be released.

Powell should be serving a harsh punishment not waiting for parole consideration.

Betty Broderick
Betty Broderick’s husband left her for a younger woman.  They had a nasty divorce, and she left nasty messages on his voicemail. 
"This is a message to f—-head and the bitch. You have one hell of a nerve dumping the kids here on the sidewalk and zooming away without making any attempt to communicate with me about my plans for the weekend. Make me sick, both of you. I have a good mind to dump the kids back on you and drive away. Call me. We have a lot to talk about, asshole. And come pick up your four children that you're working so hard to have custody of. Congratulations. You can have them."
Anyone who has watched a sister, daughter, mom, aunt or friend go through a divorce knows it is painful.  Anyone who has had a husband walk out on them for another women and then control the money understands the pain and anger that comes from those events.
We can all understand her anger but not the murderous way she handled the situation.
Betty in her own words said, “I realize now that he was right when he said our battles would continue until one of us was dead."

Dan Broderick was not perfect in his treatment of his wife but he did not deserve to be a murder victim.


Charles Manson

Why do we entertain the idea of Charlie Manson getting paroled?  He was paroled once at the age of nineteen in 1954.  March of 1958 he was paroled a second time and started pimping and stealing.  In 1967 he was once again released from prison.  What happened next made him infamous.  The Manson Family was born and the killing spree began.  He was given lifetime sentence but still periodically comes up for parole. 

I believe that the parole board re-victimizes victims.  Surviving victims must pay their own way to  the hearings.  They must re-tell their painful stories to strangers.  They must go through the trauma of having to think about their assailant getting out of prison.  This person could harm them in retaliation or seek new victims.  This is a lot to put on innocent people where were targeted by a criminal.


If the above pictures look like harmless older people, think again.  They are all killers.  All of their victims are still dead.   Their victims did not have the chance to grow old and gray.  Why should any of them walk among the free.....EVER!?
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