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Commit murder.....go free in 7 years.....and do it again.....this is crazy.

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  • Commit murder.....go free in 7 years.....and do it again.....this is crazy.

    Commit murder....go free in 7 years....do it again. People get more time for drug possession and white collar crimes....this is insane. I am sure the ALCU will make sure he gets his comfy mattress, color tv, and three squares with snacks before they try to get him paroled in the next few years. Of course he only did it because another kid stepped on his tinker toys when he was 4 yrs old. This is why we need the death penalty.


    Clerk Beaten To Death With Baseball Bat

    POSTED: 11:34 am PDT October 13, 2006
    UPDATED: 7:00 pm PDT October 13, 2006

    LOS ANGELES -- A convenience store clerk was beaten to death with a baseball bat in Chatsworth Friday, allegedly by a felon who had committed a similar murder in the 1990s and told his family he wanted to commit "suicide by cop," police said.

    Upon his arrest early Friday, 33-year-old Frank Kaatz directed officers to the victim, Rohan Rambukwella, who had worked the night shift at the am/pm store at 20445 Devonshire Blvd. for about five years, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

    "He did direct the officer to the body," said Lt. Paul Vernon, who heads up the LAPD's media relations section.

    Kaatz's family called police to report that he was smashing furniture in their home in the 10000 block of Oso Avenue around 2 a.m., Smith said. He had already left the house by the time officers arrived, but his family told authorities he wanted to commit "suicide by cop," she said.

    "He started saying that he didn't have a life and it wasn't worth living, and that he was going to end it," said Frank Kaatz Sr. "He said, 'You'll never see me alive again,' and then he walked out the door.

    "I really feel bad for the family. It's just one of those crazy things that I don’t have any answers for."

    The clerk was discovered dead at the shop, Smith said. A bloodied baseball bat believed to belong to the suspect was found in a nearby alleyway, she said.

    After the beating, Kaatz went to a nearby Denny's restaurant, ordered a coffee and told the server that he had "murdered someone," investigators said.

    "He came in and he said that he murdered someone," said witness Maria Delgadillo.

    The servers then called 911 to inform officials of Kaatz being in their restaurant. Kaatz then left the restaurant and went on the roof, officers said.

    Kaatz was convicted of murder in 1994 for the stabbing death of another convenience store clerk, Smith said. He was sentenced to 14 years in prison, but was released after serving seven years, according to Los Angeles police Lt. Paul Vernon.

    Kaatz was arrested at least two more times for parole violations and was most recently released in July, he said.

    Rambukwella, a native of Sri Lanka, had worked the night shift at the convenience store for five years, according to police. He had no family in the United States....


    Link to story
    "If a Nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.... If we are to guard against ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be informed."
    -- Thomas Jefferson to Col. Yancey, 1816

  • #2
    tragedy but not the ACLU's fault

    The ACLU fights for the rights of Americans to be free from governmental tyranny.
    The legal system that allows a person to go free after 7 years is part of the legislative process where our elected officials determine sentence standards.

    By the way you'll notice alot of poor mentally ill people in prisons and then on the streets and lots of rich people who have hurt many more people through their thieving ways who are on probation and having bloody mary's at the country club as we speak.

    Obviously this person has mental problems that have been unaddressed since we have moved our monies from mental health to the (military) friends of the Bushs.

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    • #3
      I agree ...... it's nuts! Bring back the Death Penalty for Murder ~ when there's no doubt. This is crazy ~~ whatever happened to the three strike rule?? Or do I not understand it correctly?
      Perpetual Motion ~ Going Nowhere Fast!!

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      • #4
        Originally posted by VVTrader View Post
        The ACLU fights for the rights of Americans to be free from governmental tyranny.

        If you believe that....I have this bridge for sale.

        The legal system that allows a person to go free after 7 years is part of the legislative process where our elected officials determine sentence standards.

        By the way you'll notice alot of poor mentally ill people in prisons and then on the streets and lots of rich people who have hurt many more people through their thieving ways who are on probation and having bloody mary's at the country club as we speak.

        Obviously this person has mental problems that have been unaddressed since we have moved our monies from mental health to the (military) friends of the Bushs.
        Sounds like another "I am so ashamed of being successful" apology that young people are taught today. The same attitude was the root cause of the failure of socialism in the former USSR. However we can all see that it still struggles to remain alive in countries where "freedom" tolerates such ignorance.




        Daniel

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        • #5
          There are some specific times when the police should be applauded for use of excessive force in shooting a criminal to death- this may just be such a case. I think this country needs a system to review all convictions that result in the death penalty and I think if no reasonable doubt of guilt exists they should be promply exectuted. The prisons need room badly.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by tonyg
            There are some specific times when the police should be applauded for use of excessive force in shooting a criminal to death- this may just be such a case. I think this country needs a system to review all convictions that result in the death penalty and I think if no reasonable doubt of guilt exists they should be promply exectuted. The prisons need room badly.
            I agree that sometimes it would be nice for the police to take care of the courts' problems from to time. But that being said, I think that it is very hard on the police officers who actually do it. Emotionally speaking, it can't be easy to take a life. For those who care about life, that is.


            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by tonyg
              The prisons need room badly.
              It is not a matter of the expense. It is a matter of right, wrong, and deterant.

              Would road rage decline if instead of sending in money for a ticket the perp had to explain to her boss that she needs time off to clean trash from the highway for two days?

              Would the wife beater be so quick to strike again if his neighbors see him spend a week with his head in the stocks, having garbage and waste thrown at him?

              Would a gang banger be so quick to commit murder if the punishment was death by public hanging, swift and sure, and in the same year of offense?

              No the problem is we have gotten to "sanitary" in our dealing with wrong...so much so that the teaching and deterant has wained.

              Daniel

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