swedie
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2011
- Messages
- 5,472
- Reaction score
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There is never any closure for the victims' families. Even if they get the answers as to why DS murdered Terry and Hailey, their lives remain the same and they are forced to carry on. Should he die, the family will not be burdened with attending all his court hearings and trial and then his appeals if he pleads not guilty or NCR. Should he be found NCR, and end up in a mental institution, there's a greater chance that he could one day be released back into society as in the case of Vince Li. Then there is the financial burden on the victims' families, as well as taxpayers.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manit...-group-home-sparks-winnipeg-protest-1.3068059
I think of little Tori S and what her family has been through and still going through. She was murdered almost six and a half years ago and they still have no closure and never will. Some of TS's family members have said they wished we had the death penalty in Canada for child murderers.
"Since Rafferty's trial, every time he comes back to court I get more and more enraged. We are all forced to re-live the horrific events from that day," Tori's father, Rodney Stafford, said.
He'd also like to see the death penalty for child killers.
His mother, Doreen Graichen, agrees.
"I would like to do my best to get Canadians to wise up. To me, you take a life, you lose a life."
Graichen said her family has been torn apart by her granddaughter's death, with some members estranged from each other.
"It has changed everyone I know that was close to Tori," she said. "I've gone from anger and hatred to grieving and acceptance. The only thing, I worry about -- and it's premature, I know -- is the appeal. If by some freak of nature, he (Rafferty) is granted another trial, I hope it takes many, many years and I hope I'm not around anymore because I can't live through that."
http://www.torontosun.com/2014/04/04/five-years-after-tori-staffords-went-missing
For multiple murder offences committed after December 2, 2011, a court may, after considering any jury recommendation, impose consecutive periods of parole ineligibility for each murder. While the provision is not mandatory, this means, for example, that an individual convicted of three counts of first degree murder could face life with no parole for 75 years - or 25 years for each conviction.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_(Canadian_law)
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manit...-group-home-sparks-winnipeg-protest-1.3068059
I think of little Tori S and what her family has been through and still going through. She was murdered almost six and a half years ago and they still have no closure and never will. Some of TS's family members have said they wished we had the death penalty in Canada for child murderers.
"Since Rafferty's trial, every time he comes back to court I get more and more enraged. We are all forced to re-live the horrific events from that day," Tori's father, Rodney Stafford, said.
He'd also like to see the death penalty for child killers.
His mother, Doreen Graichen, agrees.
"I would like to do my best to get Canadians to wise up. To me, you take a life, you lose a life."
Graichen said her family has been torn apart by her granddaughter's death, with some members estranged from each other.
"It has changed everyone I know that was close to Tori," she said. "I've gone from anger and hatred to grieving and acceptance. The only thing, I worry about -- and it's premature, I know -- is the appeal. If by some freak of nature, he (Rafferty) is granted another trial, I hope it takes many, many years and I hope I'm not around anymore because I can't live through that."
http://www.torontosun.com/2014/04/04/five-years-after-tori-staffords-went-missing
For multiple murder offences committed after December 2, 2011, a court may, after considering any jury recommendation, impose consecutive periods of parole ineligibility for each murder. While the provision is not mandatory, this means, for example, that an individual convicted of three counts of first degree murder could face life with no parole for 75 years - or 25 years for each conviction.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_(Canadian_law)