"On the Day of
Atonement a live goat was chosen by lot. The high priest, robed in linen
garments, laid both his hands on the goat's head, and confessed over it the
iniquities of the children of Israel. The sins of the people thus symbolically
transferred to the beast, and it was removed to the wilderness. The people felt
purged, and for the time being, guiltless."
—from the Book of
Leviticus
This is a collection of not-so-various
remarks about a man convicted of rape and murder and serving a life sentence in
solitary confinement, hereinafter referred to as the prisoner. Each comment appears in italics, and is an estimation of the appropriateness
of this sentence.
One gentleman writes:
"I think I have a partial solution to the problem. I call it the self-
imposed death penalty...why not, in the cases where the killer has not taken
their own life, don't we make it easier for them to end it right then and
there. If the police swoop down on a suspect in a vicious murder case, maybe
instead of them trying to take him down before he hurts himself, they should
surround him and then slide him a gun with one bullet in it. Therefore they can
make the decision and some might choose the self imposed death penalty route.
But maybe that's too dangerous for your liking. How about we just let convicted
murderers have shoe laces in their cells. Or better yet, how about a noose
under their bed, just in case they find some goodness in their heart and want
to save society all the money and trouble of dealing with them over the next 40
or 50 years. Surely this is a moral way to deal with a very touchy problem. It
costs us $125,000 a year to house the
prisoner in a jail cell. Protecting him from other inmates and from
himself.
Some would argue we should turn him loose in the general population and see
what happens...(or) maybe the more moral way to approach it is to just put
a noose or some sleeping pills or a cyanide tablet in the prisoner's jail
cell and let him decide.
You'd have to think that a truly innocent man would keep fighting for justice.
However the truly guilty may just find one day that there's no point in going
on. He's never getting out of prison so the self imposed death penalty is an
option we should grant him. It is the only thing that I would be happy to see
him succeed at. Until Tomorrow, Your Friendly Neighborhood Blogger"
I hesitate to say this, since this
blogger is my neighbor—and so friendly—but in the particular instance of the prisoner: it's a bit difficult to
fight for justice when you've been barred from speaking publicly about your
case since two years before your conviction.
Other suggestions were more succinct:
"He can fucking die as far as I'm concerned."
This one is from a newspaper report:
"As he was driven away from the courthouse to begin a life behind bars,
the crowd waiting outside, numbering in the hundreds, cheered, hurled insults
and applauded.
'Rot in hell,' screamed one person in the crowd."
A former corrections officer and one-time guard for the prisoner had some kind enough words to say, and they stand in stark
contrast to the feelings his fellow inmates have for him:
"According to the corrections officer, the prisoner's crimes, though horrific, pale in comparison to some
of the acts of depravity committed by other inmates."
"He was always cheerful on my watch...it's his notoriety that draws the comments among other hardened
criminals."
'Did you slip cyanide in his meal?' the former guard quoted one inmate as
saying."
And this person would probably say
that cyanide's too easy:
"Friend of mine says the
prisoner is suffering in prison...being in solitary confinement for his
own protection and he says that the
prisoner will suffer by spending the rest of his life in prison.
I say hell no...he cannot feel remorse....I say he should be introduced to the
general prison population and whatever happens, happens. I feel he is getting
better treatment than some of us...trying to make ends meet. He gets 3 meals a
day and we pay to have him in solitary for how many years the miserable waste
of human life lives."
The author of this post seems not to
notice it is possible to lack remorse, and still suffer.
The quotes cited above are a small
selection chosen from literally millions of places on the Internet. You can
find a site that will offer these suggestions as to what should be done with the prisoner, almost with your eyes
closed. To summarize, they've included:
§
offering him a loaded gun
§
a ready-made noose
§
a large number of sleeping pills
§
shoelaces
§
and cyanide
§
they could house him in the general population and
let nature take its course
§
he could either fucking die
§
or rot in hell
Knowing this was the last opportunity they'd have,
the cheering crowd waited for hours to catch a glimpse of the prisoner, in handcuffs and leg
shackles and on his way to an 8'x4' solitary isolation cell.
They say the decision to oblige the prisoner with life-long solitary
confinement was due in large part to the sadistic nature of his crimes.
A sadist is defined as one who
takes pleasure in meting out punishment
and suffering, to another.