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- Jan 29, 2021
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Don't get me wrong - the kooky anti-psych left was complicit with Reagan in all of this. But the decision to save a few pennies for the low low price of widespread social problems decades down the line (when none of the fuckers are alive still) is something the GOP signed off on themselves and I'm comfortable saddling them with the blame.1970’s bleeding heart liberal: “CLOSE ASYLUMS! It’s INHUMANE!”
1980’s bleeding heart liberal: “community based
mental health care!
“
2000’s bleeding heart liberal: “That good for nothing Reagan DISMANTLED the mental healthcare system and unloaded them on to local communities to save money! Outrageous!”
Who would have thought that crazy people would act crazy and not take the pills the doctor told them to take?!
there will be men there who murdered their mothers. he will have friends.It’s prison man. There’ll be plenty of people who did fucked up things.
>ShakespeareThis trial should be taped and preserved like it’s some modern all time classic on the level of Shakespeare
Don't get me wrong - the kooky anti-psych left was complicit with Reagan in all of this. But the decision to save a few pennies for the low low price of widespread social problems decades down the line (when none of the fuckers are alive still) is something the GOP signed off on themselves and I'm comfortable saddling them with the blame.
I doubt Chris will be released until the trial date. Chris has already been in custody for nearly a year now without trial. Unless he makes bail (and given his financial situation plus the fact that no one be it family or outside enablers) wants to bail him out, I doubt that’ll happen.If Chris would be released from jail now (say, until the trial), where would he go? Would the state give him some place to crash or would he literally be out on the street, being forced to look for his own accomodations? I mean, he'll receive his tugboat once he's free, so he can at least pay for whatever place he ends up in, but I somewhat doubt that Chris would do a good job of looking for a place on his own.
I don't expect or even humor the thought of a possible release from jail. I was merely asking what the conditions would be if he was to be released, given that he clearly can't go back to BC14 and I sorta doubt that the Virginia prison system can just throw people on the street (if only cause that would make a re-arrest harder to pull off).I doubt Chris will be released until the trial date. Chris has already been in custody for nearly a year now without trial. Unless he makes bail (and given his financial situation plus the fact that no one be it family or outside enablers) wants to bail him out, I doubt that’ll happen.
Another reason why Chris won’t be let out is because his bond request has been denied. It is possible to get it back, but in order for it to be reinstated it must be under these circumstances: the bond is deemed excessive or under unreasonable terms of recognizance (a type of bond where a prisoner is released on a specific condition or conditions). Chris meets neither condition and since it’s already been about a year, there’s a very slim chance he’ll be released.
But seeing as with Chris, nothing is really predictable, let’s say he does some how get a bond deal and is actually able to pay for it. Under Virginia law, the judge must use any of the following for the bond:
Place the person in the custody of a designated person or organization agreeing to supervise the accused;
Place restrictions on the travel, association or place of abode of the accused during the period of release, and restrict contacts with household members for a period not to exceed seventy-two hours;
Require the execution of an unsecured bond;
Require the execution of a secured bond, which at the option of the accused shall be satisfied with sufficient solvent sureties, or the deposit of cash in lieu thereof. In determining solvency the judicial officer may consider only the actual value of any interest in real estate or personal property owned by the proposed surety. Solvency is found if the value of the proposed surety’s equity in real estate or personal property equals or exceeds the amount of bond.
Impose any other condition deemed reasonably necessary to assure appearance and good behavior of the accused pending trial. The judicial officer may require that the accused return to custody after specified hours.
In short, it’s possible for Chris to be accommodated if he’s given a bond deal, but considering all that Chris has done and the sheer unlikelyhood that Chris will receive bond again (let alone agree to sell his house or toys/games), means he’s staying where he is until his trial.
Here’s the source for anyone who is curious
I doubt Chris will be released until the trial date. Chris has already been in custody for nearly a year now without trial. Unless he makes bail (and given his financial situation plus the fact that no one be it family or outside enablers) wants to bail him out, I doubt that’ll happen.
Another reason why Chris won’t be let out is because his bond request has been denied. It is possible to get it back, but in order for it to be reinstated it must be under these circumstances: the bond is deemed excessive or under unreasonable terms of recognizance (a type of bond where a prisoner is released on a specific condition or conditions). Chris meets neither condition and since it’s already been about a year, there’s a very slim chance he’ll be released.
But seeing as with Chris, nothing is really predictable, let’s say he does some how get a bond deal and is actually able to pay for it. Under Virginia law, the judge must use any of the following for the bond:
Place the person in the custody of a designated person or organization agreeing to supervise the accused;
Place restrictions on the travel, association or place of abode of the accused during the period of release, and restrict contacts with household members for a period not to exceed seventy-two hours;
Require the execution of an unsecured bond;
Require the execution of a secured bond, which at the option of the accused shall be satisfied with sufficient solvent sureties, or the deposit of cash in lieu thereof. In determining solvency the judicial officer may consider only the actual value of any interest in real estate or personal property owned by the proposed surety. Solvency is found if the value of the proposed surety’s equity in real estate or personal property equals or exceeds the amount of bond.
Impose any other condition deemed reasonably necessary to assure appearance and good behavior of the accused pending trial. The judicial officer may require that the accused return to custody after specified hours.
In short, it’s possible for Chris to accommodated if he’s giving a bond deal, but considering all that Chris has done and the sheer unlikelyhood that Chris will receive bond again (let alone pay for it), means he’s staying where he is until his trial.
Here’s the source for anyone who is curious
People are also forgetting that Chris isn't a pedo, and legally speaking isn't a rapist (yet). It's not like everyone in prison is going to know the intricate details of the case. They're just going to see a weirdo who thinks he's some kind of hedgehog jesus.Inmates might not line up to give Chris snacks, but if you’re serving five years for an armed robbery or whatever, do you really want to double that because someone said someone is a pedo?
Yes but lifers don’t give a shit.It’s prison man. There’ll be plenty of people who did fucked up things.
As for human interaction, it’s not like Chris has a lot as it is. Heck, he will probably socialize more in jail than at home.
Inmate accounts can’t always be trusted, because they have a certain vested interest in pointing out how they made have done X but “hey! They weren’t a pedo and in fact, those chomos were CURBSTOMPED YO!” (Jail stories in general are often exaggerated because what is the listener going to do? Fact check them?)
Go to Reddit and check out the subreddit for sex offenders. Every once in a while someone will write a panic post because they’re about to do time and don’t want to die. And the SO who have done time will always say the same thing: They’ll be fine if they’ll just keep their head down.
There is a middle ground between being buddy buddy with someone and murdering them and beating them up: Ignoring them.
Inmates might not line up to give Chris snacks, but if you’re serving five years for an armed robbery or whatever, do you really want to double that because someone said someone is a pedo?
I guess what you posted means the legal system would have to put him into a group home or something like that (I simply assume none of his relatives want to deal with Chris).
Chris isn't going to maximum security with the hardened criminals lol.Yes but lifers don’t give a shit.
Also there be situations where no one rats. No witnesses, no evidence.
Again: Chris wouldn’t be likely to run into that kind of prisoner. That kind of lifer would be segregated into a supermax or a jail for dangerous inmates.Yes but lifers don’t give a shit.
Also there be situations where no one rats. No witnesses, no evidence.
Yes, he’d be placed in something like that but only if they agree to house him. If they don’t, I assume they have to either look else where or just don’t release him due to the danger he poses to others (but mostly himself)I don't expect or even humor the thought of a possible release from jail. I was merely asking what the conditions would be if he was to be released, given that he clearly can't go back to BC14 and I sorta doubt that the Virginia prison system can just throw people on the street (if only cause that would make a re-arrest harder to pull off).
I guess what you posted means the legal system would have to put him into a group home or something like that (I simply assume none of his relatives want to deal with Chris).
Nah man… I’m sure the niggo 20 years into a 40 year sentence can’t wait to lose his cozy kitchen job and long timer privileges the second they come across Chris.Chris isn't going to maximum security with the hardened criminals lol.
Sure, but if he gets 10 years, he is going to be in with some sort of hardened criminals.Again: Chris wouldn’t be likely to run into that kind of prisoner. That kind of lifer would be segregated into a supermax or a jail for dangerous inmates.
And lifers and inmates facing decades in jail usually have privileges and perks they don’t want to lose, like cozy jobs etc., just because they happen to run across yet another weird pedo/sex offender inmate.
Plus there’s one more thing to consider: The group home (if they look to put him in one) has to agree to supervise him. Even without this case, one look into Chris and it’s a no.This is kind of one of the basic problems with Chris. He’s not nearly crazy enough to get seriously tard wrangled or be put in a group home, but at the same time he’s too dysfunctional to be left completely to his own devices.
I reckon that’s one of the reasons why this process has been so long and unusual. Nobody knew for sure what to do with him.
Chris is on the spectrum and has some degree of mental retardation.
But he’s not mentally ill, and nowhere near mentally ill enough to be wrangled against his will.
Chris is an emancipated adult, and (at least on paper) should be able to take care of himself and live like an adult.
He just chooses not to, and the “system” isn’t really equipped to deal with that.