What happens if young people are convicted of murder and have the opportunity to enter society again?
Miller v. Alabama - In 2012, the Supreme Court ruled that the absence of mandatory life sentence and parole juvenile offenders is unconstitution - hoping that about 2,000 criminals in the country find answers is
With a unique visit, the new FRONTLINE documentary, the second chance for children, followed the incident of the first two boys' lives in the country trying to undertake ground breaking decisions - Anthony Loron, Massachusetts
At the age of 17, Ron stabbed a 20-year-old Bobby Botho. Teenagers who were marked as violent, dangerous and unchangeable when the country was suppressing the so-called boys' Super Predator - were not allowed to take pleasure with their lives. This theory has gained popularity in the academic circle, both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party agree with this theory, leading to extreme black and Latin decisions.
As documentaries explore, the "Super Predator" theory has been largely denied because it has been unreliable at the present time. A series of rulings by the Supreme Court, which rely heavily on the development of science, indicates that the individual situation of juvenile offenders must be considered when receiving a judgment. The court also decided that many of them should have the opportunity to prove what they have changed.
In the excerpt from the second chance kids above, please enter the parole release hearing that determines the fate of the roll on. Please see L'Hotel and its legal team defending release after 18 years.
As underage criminals across the country are waiting for their potential reconsideration, the documentary poses a sharp question about crime and punishment in the United States, and some criminals have a second chance What happens when you get
The second chance kids' premiere starts at 10 pm on Tuesday, May 2. EST / PBS station at 9 pm (show local list) and online
If you say that someone in Louisiana who was convicted of murder for the murder would have the opportunity to be released from prison, you may have been in the middle of the night. The Supreme Court had a chance to assert that on Monday teenagers who committed murderous crimes and committed murder in prisoners' lives despite a snowstorm attack on Washington, DC they would be released. The judgment resulted from the murder of the sheriff in Louisiana in 1963. . Henry Montgomery - 17-year old 17-year-old player shot Charles Hurt - subject of judgment
After the car accident, the murder case was the second most common cause of death among young Americans. The killing rate of young people here is ten times that of Western Europe, 70 times that of Japan. Almost (75%) young murderers know their victims: 27% are families, 48% are friends and acquaintances. At a rate of 80%, young murderers use guns, at a rate of 75%, murder is on collective violence. The girl accounts for 10% of the killing of young people, whose victims are usually parents, boyfriends, or their own children.
The most common thing is that two teenagers are fighting and escalating to violence. Many murders occur in or around the campus. Some experts think that if the youth can learn to control the impulse and apologize then the murder rate will fall. Indeed, when someone said "I'm sorry" in the survey on youth anger of the road, I found that the violence ended. Other experts have linked juvenile violence to mental illness and genetic factors. The following situation doubled the possibility of youth committing murder: family history of abuse or negligence, gang members, and criminal violence. These risks tripled: house guns, difficulties at school, low attendance, arrest history and neurological diseases