- Joined
- May 20, 2014
Just updated the OP with a YouTube version of the call.
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I wonder if he can even be bailed before his arraignment. Particularly given he's likely facing a felony charge.
I'll give the gist, because the actual transcription does not matter.I wonder if it's possible to clear it up a little bit, I can hardly understand anything that's being said.
Yeah, this.![]()
I think that is the point. Noone expects Chris to come out of this saying "What I did was wrong, and I am not the victim".He'll hate the gamestop employee for the rest of his life. He'll never stop believing that the gamestop employee is a bad person for defending himself. But maybe, just maybe, he'll understand that assaulting people gets him in trouble, and maybe he'll learn to keep his seething hatred to himself forever.
He's gonna see the rapistWhatever happens, I hope he is actually forced to see a therapist. I believe it was strongly recommended that he go to therapy after the Snyder thing, but that would cut into lego bucks.
He really needs help if he thinks its ok to act this way though. He's gone completely off the rails.
You know, I absolutely want to see Chris go to jail. For the same reason I would want anyone who commits violent crimes and can't be reasoned with to go to jail. It's the only possible way he'll learn not to assault people.
No one's bailing him out this time, I trust? He's very obviously out of resources and friends to call, which means he's stuck again.
WHAT bail? The inheritance money is gone and Barb is drowning in debt so badly that she's taking out loans on one car after the other just to pay for a month's rent.
is it possible that Chris may be sentenced to prison for a long length of time or possibly a life sentence depending on what crime he's committed? I'm asking this because as of right now I don't know what crime Chris has committed
53 pages in (combining the old thread) and nobody's asked the important question; why is there still a Sonic Boom display in Gamestop? The game came out 2 months ago and flopped. It's almost as if they left the display up to troll Chris...
I think I comprehend your statement.Because what should've been the last resort of last resorts might be the first serious attempt to help Chris -- and even if he does end up turning out for the better, incarceration is still going to extract its psychological pound of flesh from him. Even if you know that someone is something of a dumbass, you kind of have to feel for someone who has fallen through almost every non-punitive safety net (friends, school, family, church, a previous brush with the law, etc.) and is only just now learning lessons he ideally would've learned two decades ago. You kind of get attached to the guy who wrote your favorite kitsch webcomic, you know?
The therapy sessions were to determine if Chris was an immediate threat to anyone. Not to work out Chris problems.I was under the impression that Chris having to see a therapist was part of the plea-bargain that Bell cut for the Chandlers two years ago. Either the therapy didn't achieve anything, or the court just never bothered making sure Chris actually attended the sessions.
I'm not talking about the hope of prison providing correction to him. I'm talking about the hope that he learns assaulting people gets him in trouble, like a dog getting swatted with a newspaper.I disagree. Criminals are not born with bad behaviour by default, they are made by their environment and culture. The reality is that prisons exist because society doesn't know what to do with them. Therefore, what easier way than to imprison them? I baffle at the ridiculousness of 'correctional institutes' because the people working at such institutions don't know how to correct people or help them with their problems, they're not trained in that area.