Originally posted by Beef Oven!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven!
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Ultimately, of course, his fate has been for the court, rather than those clamouring for clemency, to decide (and will likelyh remain so unless such clamouring is of sufficient intensity to prompt him to appeal is sentence), but I don't understand your reference to (potential) "scapegoating" of the guilty party as I cannot see that the court has treated him differently to any other murderer. In deciding on conviction and appropriate sentence for the ultimate crime, what part could an "objective mind (able) to see beyond...the individual Marine in question and what he did" be expected to play in the passing of such judgement and sentence?
The only possibility here, as far as I can tell, might be "extenuating circumstances" and the only ones on which possibly credible attempts might be mounted are the particular pressures under which said marine operated as part of his professional duties and the psychological damage that might have been caused as a direct consequence of such pressures. To these, I'd have but two responses. Firstly, no one forced the marine into the job that he was doing and it is reasonable to assume that he went into it with his eyes wide open. Secondly, his employers and the contractual responsibilities thrust upon him are solely answerable for any risk of such psychological damage being done to him. On the latter, a sentence might be commuted on the grounds that murder was committed when the balance of the murderer's mind was sufficiently disturbed, but the fact that this murder was evidently carried out sadistically (as you agree) in cold blood, wilfully, consciously and intentionally appears to leave little if any room for consideration of such extenuation.
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