ATL, do you cut and paste the tweets in one step? I copied a batch, but even if I pasted as text in a text editor, it still left lots of formatting to undo. :facepalm:
Yes, my cut/pastes aren't as good as others here. :blush:
[emphasis mine]Prosecutor starts: #JustinRossHarris defense says June 18 was the worst day in his life, no it was the worst day in Cooper Harris' life
I am guessing the most severe punishment he could receive is LWOP. Yet I feel like most cases of "child left in hot car" receive zero jail time or very little. Of course, you could say that a lot of those cases are complete accidents, but people always allege that some aren't. I just worry that this case being unprecendented in that respect could pose an issue. I remember so many people defending JRH when the case first hit the news. Of course when the info came out about the search history, his supporters dwindled to none, but info that turns the public against you doesn't always hold up in court. Could his attorney figure out a way to make the sexting or internet search history seem less convincing?
This is a case of a nice, ordinary religious middle class, educated, non-threatening man who is being charged with a crime that no one has ever been charged with. He is possibly facing a punishment that is decades longer than what any other parent who left their child in a hot car has faced. Will this pose an issue in the courtroom? I feel like his attornies need to get the jurors to see the case from the same view his supporters did when the case first hit the news.
Foster father Seth Jackson 29, of Kansas will serve 32mon. for the of car death of his foster daughter.http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/ho...h-jackson-sentenced-32-months-hot-car-n296866
In that case, he didn't do it intentionally, and he seemed to have remorse, but he was smoking pot when his daughter died. I don't think he is one of the most sympathetic parents this has happened to, and he only got 32 months. I am really curious to know what the most severe punishment anyone has received for leaving their child in a hot car. I've been led to believe that JRH is the first case where a parent has been charged with intentionally murdering their child. How unprecedented is this case? IMO, the result of this case could either make prosecutors more open to charging parents with murder for children who died in this horrific manner, or more relucatant. If JRH isn't convicted, if this case isn't enough to get a verdict, what would be? I feel like if that happens, the jury is saying that they don't believe a parent would kill their child in that way. And you have to wonder if the jury is just a fluke, or do they represent America?
Cases like Lyn Balfours, when prosecuted, typically end in some sort of compromise: a plea to a reduced charge, sometimes with probation and a suspended sentence, sometimes with community service. Going all the way to trial is a relative rarity.
What happened to Balfour was even rarer. She was charged not with manslaughter, but with second-degree murder, carrying a possible prison sentence of up to 40 years.
After Lyn Balfours acquittal, this comment appeared on the Charlottesville News Web site:
An El Cajon mother whose 4-month-old baby died after she unknowingly left him in a car overnight was sentenced Tuesday to 10 years in prison.
Daniel Gray was recently sentenced to four years in prison for the death of his infant, who was left in a car for three hours during a hot Arizona summer, according to the Arizona Republic. Gray pleaded guilty to manslaughter.
Samantha Harper was charged with two counts of aggravated child neglect and two counts of felony child murder. She pleaded guilty to two counts of attempted aggravated child neglect. Harper was sentenced to 16 years in jail. She will serve eight years upfront before being released on supervised probation from the remainder of the sentence
So it does seem like JRH's case is unprecedented. I did a google search for [child left in hot car "years in"] since I figured that would bring up all the cases where the parent recevied or faced 2+ years in prison. I am just a little worried about how there doesn't seem to ever be a case where the parent was charged and found guilty of intentionally killing their child in this manner. Is JRH the first person to murder his son this way or is this the first case where prosecutors feel they have enough evidence to go forward with murder charges?
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