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It appears we'll have to agree to not agree...which I'm more then ok with. |
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Furthermore, if "hate" is in itself a crime you had better bring out the thought police. The idea that we are going to assess the amount of hate that drove someone to steal, hit, kill ... just so ridiculous. |
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* Story Highlights * NEW: Police: Man apparently targeted church because of its liberal stances * NEW: Suspect accused in 2000 of threatening to kill then-wife * Suspect's letter says he couldn't find job, hated liberals, police say * Man, 58, arrested and charged after 2 killed, seven others injured in Unitarian church KNOXVILLE, Tennessee (CNN) -- A man suspected of fatally shooting two adults at a Knoxville church Sunday was motivated by frustration over being unable to obtain a job and hatred for liberal stances, police said Monday. A four-page letter found in the vehicle of Jim Adkisson -- who also is accused of injuring seven other adults -- indicated he may have targeted the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church because of recent publicity about the church's liberal policies. "He did express that frustration, that the liberal movement was getting more jobs," Knoxville Police Chief Sterling Owen IV told reporters Monday. "And he felt like he was being kept out of the loop because of his age." Police said Adkisson, 58, of Powell, Tennessee, walked into the church's sanctuary during a children's musical performance and fired a shotgun before being overpowered by congregants. Adkisson -- who police said wasn't a member of the church -- has been charged with one count of first-degree murder. Killed in the shooting were Linda Kraeger, 61, and Greg McKendry, 60, police said. Witnesses said McKendry, an usher and board member at the church, tried to shield others when he was shot, according to The Associated Press.VideoWatch scene at church after shooting » Four of the seven surviving wounded were still in the University of Tennessee Medical Center on Monday evening. Officials there said two patients were in critical condition and one was "stable." The hospital would not release information about the fourth person. Owen said the case is being investigated as a hate crime. He said the letter, signed by Adkisson but not addressed to anyone, expressed hatred for gay people. According to Out & About, a Tennessee gay newspaper based in Nashville, TVUUC was home to several gay and gay-friendly groups and recently posted a "gays welcome" sign "as part of its long-range planning to conduct more outreach and welcome" to gay men and lesbians. The church, on its Web site, describes itself as a community that has worked for social change -- including desegregation, women's rights and gay rights -- since the 1950s. Authorities also discovered a letter from the state government telling Adkisson he was having his food stamps reduced or eliminated, police said. Owen said Adkisson has resided in the Knoxville area for three or four years and his last known employment was in 2006. Neighbors told The Associated Press that Adkisson had been a truck driver, and Owen added that Adkisson has an associate's degree in mechanical engineering. See map » "It appears that what brought him to this horrible event was his lack of being able to obtain a job, his frustration over that, and his stated hatred for the liberal movement," Owen said. VideoWatch police chief describe latest findings » Adkisson's letter also indicated "that he expected to be there shooting people until the police arrived and he fully expected to be killed by the responding police," Owen said. Investigators found 76 shotgun shells in the church, Owen said. Three rounds were fired from a 12-gauge shotgun that was brought into the church hidden in a guitar case, police said. There is "an indication he was not targeting the children," but that has not been conclusively determined, Owen said. iReport.com: Are you there? Share photos, video, accounts The shooting came eight years after Adkisson, according to divorce documents, threatened to kill his fourth wife and himself. In a 2000 complaint filed in Tennessee's Anderson County, his then-wife, Liza Alexander, said she was "in fear for my life and what he might do." She also claimed that Adkisson "drinks heavily every day, and becomes belligerent, and makes threats." "My husband, Jim David Adkisson told a friend of mine that one of his options is to blow my brains out and then blow his own brains out (I heard him say this)," Alexander wrote in her petition for a protection order, which she was granted. The only criminal record authorities have found of Adkisson shows two instances of driving under the influence -- one in California "a number of years ago" and one "more recently" in Tennessee, Owen said. Authorities have been told that Adkisson was once in the military, a member of the 101st Airborne Division, Owen said. Lt. Col. Anne Edgecomb, an Army spokeswoman, said there is a record of a Jim David Adkisson who served beginning in 1974. He was released from active duty in 1977 and discharged in 1980. He was a helicopter repairman with the 163rd Aviation Co. at Fort Campbell, Kentucky -- part of the 101st Airborne Division. Adkisson's military record shows that in 1977 he was demoted from a specialist 4th class to private. Information about why Adkisson was demoted wasn't available. Neighbors said Adkisson was quiet and kept to himself. "He never went anywhere. He never had anybody over. Just, it was really quiet. He rode a motorcycle and you know he would go out on the weekends on his motorcycle, but other than that, you never heard from him," Melissa Coker told WVLT-TV. Coker told the AP that Adkisson had been a truck driver, but she didn't think he'd been working steadily in the past six months. "He's just a really, really nice guy," Coker told the AP. Adkisson's landlord said she did not know him well enough to make any comments on his character but said he was a good tenant who paid his bills, according to CNN affiliate WBIR-TV. Bail was set at $1 million late Sunday. Police said people were recording videos of the children's performance when the shooting happened, and investigators were reviewing the videos. Information on what, if anything, the videos show of the shooting wasn't immediately available. Three of the wounded were relatives who were visiting the church for the first time Sunday. WVLT identified the three as Joe Barnhart, 76; Jack Barnhart, 69; and Betty Barnhart, 71, who was treated and released Sunday. A statement released by the family Monday said: "The entire Barnhart family would like to thank our friends and the community for their calls, visits and prayers. ... Our family members continue to recover and we ask that your prayers continue for all that have been involved in this tragic event." |
I couldn't care less why that nutcase did it. He committed two counts of capital murder. Fry him.
Remember the guy who, on 9/11, just ran out and wanted to kill the first Muslim he saw and actually killed a 7/11 clerk who was a Sikh? Same thing. Fry him. Who cares why he did it? He murdered an innocent person. Fry him. |
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BTW, do you realize your first 2 sentences are incongruous? |
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Killing someone while telling them to hold your beer and watch this is not murder. It's prosecutable for sure, but it ain't murder. |
Actually murder (and its many classes) are part of homicide.
One determinant of degree of homicide is motive or intent. Our justice system cares a great deal about WHY people do things. it sets the parameters for arguing a case as well as assigning punishment. WHY people commit crimes is as important, in our justice system, as the crime itself. if I had not posted the entire article, just that two people were shot dead in a church, how would YOU know how to prosecute the shooter? The WHY in the crime helps you judge the initial severity of the crime itself. Put another way, if the Mr. Adkisson were merely showing his gun to others at a church function, and it accidentally went off killing 2 people, he would be charged with some type of negligent manslaughter. he didn't mean to kill them, but he showed great negligence in bringing in a loaded gun. Our society, for better or worse, places a premium on WHY. |
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Hate crime is spraypainting a swastica on someone's garage or church, burning a cross in someone's yard, etc.
Murder is murder and should pre-empt all others. You shouldn't get both, it perverts the original intent of "hate crime" IMHO. |
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And if they get shot while doing it, I have no problem with it either. |
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This is "probably" a hate crime, IMHO, though would probably fall under some older law about inciting a riot or something:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/422004-critical-mass-not-cool.html |
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Go ahead, Shaun. Just come out and say some people's lives are more important than others and that's why we have hate crimes laws. Liberals love to view people as groups and not individuals. |
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I think the intent is that you're intimidating the person. There's a big difference if someone paints a happy face on a black guy's garage and paints "go back to africa, ******". It's personal. Then again if the guy's name was Bob and they painted "go back to africa, Bob" would that count as a hate crime? :D |
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The one thing that really bothers me about the way you argue Rick is that you reply with your own agenda, you don't reply to the post at hand and it makes debating with you tiresome. Politicians do this. First, part of intent is WHY. From there you go off on tangents, and you mix terminology dissolving your argument into nothingness about whether or not you can kill 2 people accidentally. But starting here: "If you kill someone with no intent, you won't get charged with murder." there is so much wrong with this statement, that you can't argue against it. and it only gets worse. Intent in law is the planning and desire to perform an act, to fail to do so (i.e. an omission) or to achieve a state of affairs. Our justice system cares WHY people do things. it helps to set the initial charge and ultimately the punishment. Why did the driver hit the bicyclist: he was drunk Why did man 1 kill man 2: Man 2 threatened man 1; self-defense Why did the woman drown her children: she is mentally ill Why did the boy shoot and kill his friend: he didn't know the gun was loaded All of these people above will be charged, or not charged, differently in the death of another person. WHY is important in our justice system. Please accept that as fact given my examples above. |
In WA it is called Malicious Harrassment and it goes all ways. Except for the 2 cases specifically called out: Cross Burning on a Black person's property and Swastica painting on Jewish property, which I think we could agree is not kosher. Big thanks to my HS Civics class for this info :)
The constitution is a living document as are the laws written based on it. Society evolves and from time to time we need to re-evaluate what laws reflect the social norms and what do not. Remember, it was not that long ago that Women were not allowed to vote. Perhaps it is time we revisit Hate Crime laws to reflect the times, or have our DAs apply it evenly regardless of the perp's race. |
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What if you burn a cross on Obama's lawn? How about if you accidentally burn it on a Black guy's neighbor's (who's not black) lawn instead? Simple vandalism? What if the neighbor was Black too, but he wasn't the intended target? Ok, I'll stop now. :D |
A "hate crime" would be a more serious version of the same crime.
-The only difference would be the element that the actions coud be attributed to a premeditated disposition through a inherent bias, rather than base animalistic instinct reacting to an opportunistic situation. -This premeditated disposition would be the cumulation of direct experiences and an ideological standpoint based upon higher conceptualization of moralistic values. So, in essense, a hate criminal is infered by the courts to be of higher intelligence, basically the crime of being intelligent, but we needn't go into demographical enforcement statistics.... |
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