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If I were them, I would feel exactly the same way. But I also do not believe they need the pain a trial and appeals will bring. The disgusting social media dissection of their kids’ lifestyles, a bigger profile for the killer with attendant fans.Two of the families are against the plea deal
From a stepped back, societal perspective, this is the best justice we can render. His ability to appeal is incredibly limited after this - a near zero chance of it being overturned versus death penalty appeals where one tiny perceived “mistake” could have the case retried or converted to life. While I know the fear of a firing squad might be considerable, I don’t underestimate the fact that a long life doing hard time in truth may be more justice than a few minutes of misery that may or may not come. Once you are dead, the punishment ceases. Prison is every single day. Same thing. Decades of longer imprisonment (at lower cost to taxpayers and to families who never have to face him again) is arguably a worse fate for someone who thinks he is the smartest in the room and destined for better things. He will know every day he only leaves in a body bag. It is bleak…hence prisoners going on suicide watch just after sentencing.
Then there is always a risk with even a slam dunk case. One juror could have hung it for yet another trial. He would never be admitting his guilt for many years, if ever. The spotlight would shine on him many more times than it will now. The families would have to deal with even more conspiracy theorists and fans which arguably grow in proportion to the spotlight shining, and when a famous killer is found guilty versus quietly admitting guilt. It won’t take on anymore of a life of its own - he won’t get to launch himself into the spotlight as easily. He now also loses the months away from an otherwise dreary prison life he will start sooner. I don’t think he wins at all except to save face from facing a slam dunk case. Fewer groupies, less fanfare. And his loss for admitting he failed at his perfect crime won’t be easy for him IMO. All that study and he didn’t even have a fighting chance at trial because he failed so spectacularly at his sick game.
I think this is a win for justice in a civilized society - and arguably, as I said, some could credibly argue that he is not being spared anything when he likely sits in prison an extra 30 years beyond the best case scenario death penalty not overturned and carrried out many years away.
Just my 2 cents, for what it is worth.