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Okay wow, so it wasn't even murder!And Shoma's victim didn't die.

Okay wow, so it wasn't even murder!And Shoma's victim didn't die.
I’m finding it difficult to entertain the solitary confinement issue being so intertwined with the sentence. Yes, the person is likely to require protection from other prisoners. I would also argue, in this case, others need to be protected from this prisoner. Beale did take the solitary confinement into consideration in sentencing and I get that. However, the person doing the sentencing doesn’t have a crystal ball. In many ways, there isn’t certainty about the conditions under which a prisoner is incarcerated and what will happen in the future. I just think it’s really problematic or somewhat tenuous to base the sentence on the conditions of incarceration when so many factors can impact on the conditions. Does this mean other prisoners could have their sentences revisited if they experience those solitary conditions? Sorry, I’m probs rambling but basically, in my mind, prison conditions are a correctional services matter. If prison conditions are a problem it should be addressed at a systemic level and maybe this case will impact on that?
Poor petal. Imagine being so notorious you can't be near any other inmates for your own safety. Throw her into gen pop, and see how she goes.Erin has hired a human rights lawyer![]()
Triple-killer Erin Patterson’s prison conditions in cell ‘smaller than toilet’ the subject of scathing rant
There’s “screaming and yelling” outside Erin Patterson’s tiny cell, smaller than most toilets. Inside it’s worse, where it’s being described as “torture”.
Erin Patterson has hired a human rights lawyer.
It might seem like an innocuous shift but it’s part of a bigger play.
Patterson, who turned 51 inside a tiny cell at the maximum security Dame Phyllis Frost Centre in Melbourne last week, is being kept separate from other inmates.
News.com.au can reveal the Australian Human Rights Commission is ready and willing to launch an investigation into conditions for the mushroom lunch killer on the inside.
Patterson, as the individual being impacted by those conditions, needs to provide explicit consent for an investigation and she has reportedly been asked to do so by her legal team.
In the meantime, academics and medical professionals have described her life in solitary as “crushing sensory and social deprivation day after day, month after month”.
Clive Solomon, a retired Consultant General Surgeon, advocates across Australasia for the abolition of prolonged solitary confinement.
Yes, it's not meant to be a world cruise or a health kick, or even a boot camp.IMO I’m sure that prison is restrictive for EP but the issue in my mind is: is the human rights angle of it all a ploy for her to gain sympathy and therefore leniency or is it a legitimate issue? Imprisonment is meant to be serious punishment IMO
How do you feel about isolation for all that time?Life in Australia doesn't mean life. 33 years sounds like an awful lot of time, IMO. Reading up on life sentences without parole is usually for heinous crimes (tick) and how safe the general community would be if released. IDK, would she be a threat to the general community if she was released in her 80's? It's not like she is a mass murderer of random people. (Like Martin Bryant).
Also if she has no hope of ever getting out of prison, her risk of self harm would greatly increase MOO. And she would have no incentive to rehabilitate herself.
She would have to be watched closely.
Human rights comes into play also. Our system can be tough, but we aren't barbaric.
Who amongst us would come out after 33 years with our brains in tack?
I believe 33 years non parole fits the crimes.
blog/how-long-is-lifetime-in-prison-in-australia![]()
Canberra's Criminal Law Specialists | Andrew Byrnes Law Group
Andrew Byrnes Law Group provides skilled, aggressive criminal defence in Canberra and surrounds, protecting your rights with fearless representation.www.andrewbyrneslawgroup.com.au
Especially because it requires no physical effort to poison people in your '80's beyond cooking. That's what Dorothea Puente did. Erin continues to be a danger to society and her children.I agree with the DPP. Her sentence is manifestly inadequate, imo.
Taking the lives of 3 people warrants EP spending the remainder of her entire life behind bars. LWOP, no less.
Not from the pictures of the cells we saw. They looked like nice dorm rooms.Erin has hired a human rights lawyer![]()
Triple-killer Erin Patterson’s prison conditions in cell ‘smaller than toilet’ the subject of scathing rant
There’s “screaming and yelling” outside Erin Patterson’s tiny cell, smaller than most toilets. Inside it’s worse, where it’s being described as “torture”.
Erin Patterson has hired a human rights lawyer.
It might seem like an innocuous shift but it’s part of a bigger play.
Patterson, who turned 51 inside a tiny cell at the maximum security Dame Phyllis Frost Centre in Melbourne last week, is being kept separate from other inmates.
News.com.au can reveal the Australian Human Rights Commission is ready and willing to launch an investigation into conditions for the mushroom lunch killer on the inside.
Patterson, as the individual being impacted by those conditions, needs to provide explicit consent for an investigation and she has reportedly been asked to do so by her legal team.
In the meantime, academics and medical professionals have described her life in solitary as “crushing sensory and social deprivation day after day, month after month”.
Clive Solomon, a retired Consultant General Surgeon, advocates across Australasia for the abolition of prolonged solitary confinement.
I agree. Sentencing isn't the place to discuss prison reform.I’m finding it difficult to entertain the solitary confinement issue being so intertwined with the sentence. Yes, the person is likely to require protection from other prisoners. I would also argue, in this case, others need to be protected from this prisoner. Beale did take the solitary confinement into consideration in sentencing and I get that. However, the person doing the sentencing doesn’t have a crystal ball. In many ways, there isn’t certainty about the conditions under which a prisoner is incarcerated and what will happen in the future. I just think it’s really problematic or somewhat tenuous to base the sentence on the conditions of incarceration when so many factors can impact on the conditions. Does this mean other prisoners could have their sentences revisited if they experience those solitary conditions? Sorry, I’m probs rambling but basically, in my mind, prison conditions are a correctional services matter. If prison conditions are a problem it should be addressed at a systemic level and maybe this case will impact on that?
Look up Dorothea Puente in Sacramento, CA. She was actively poisoning her boarders for their Social Security checks- strangers in her 80's until she was caught.Life in Australia doesn't mean life. 33 years sounds like an awful lot of time, IMO. Reading up on life sentences without parole is usually for heinous crimes (tick) and how safe the general community would be if released. IDK, would she be a threat to the general community if she was released in her 80's? It's not like she is a mass murderer of random people. (Like Martin Bryant).
Also if she has no hope of ever getting out of prison, her risk of self harm would greatly increase MOO. And she would have no incentive to rehabilitate herself.
She would have to be watched closely.
Human rights comes into play also. Our system can be tough, but we aren't barbaric.
Who amongst us would come out after 33 years with our brains in tack?
I believe 33 years non parole fits the crimes.
blog/how-long-is-lifetime-in-prison-in-australia![]()
Canberra's Criminal Law Specialists | Andrew Byrnes Law Group
Andrew Byrnes Law Group provides skilled, aggressive criminal defence in Canberra and surrounds, protecting your rights with fearless representation.www.andrewbyrneslawgroup.com.au
She doesn't even have to cook! Slipping the right sort of something into a drink while someone isn't looking is all it takes. It can even be done from a bed or a wheelchair.Especially because it requires no physical effort to poison people in your '80's beyond cooking. That's what Dorothea Puente did. Erin continues to be a danger to society and her children.
It surely would lead me to insanity. But if that is what the prison has to do, so be it. However Human Rights might not agree. So I don't know what the answer is.How do you feel about isolation for all that time?
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