Justice for all

Dare I suggest that this be the place for informed and topical political debate?

Moderator: Andrew

Justice for all

Postby LordofDaRing » Wed Jul 25, 2007 5:09 am

Let's keep appointing Liberal judges:

A 7-year-old girl said she had been raped and repeatedly molested over the course of a year. Police in Montgomery County, acting on information from a relative, soon arrested a Liberian immigrant living in Gaithersburg. They marshaled witnesses and DNA evidence to prepare for trial.

What was missing -- for much of the nearly three years that followed -- was an interpreter fluent in the suspect's native language. A judge recently dropped the charges, not because she found that Mahamu Kanneh had been wrongly accused but because repeated delays in the case had, in her view, violated his right to a speedy trial.

"This is one of the most difficult decisions I've had to make in a long time," Katherine D. Savage said from the bench Tuesday, noting that she was mindful of "the gravity of this case and the community's concern about offenses of this type."

Loretta E. Knight, the Circuit Court clerk responsible for finding interpreters, said her office searched exhaustively for a speaker of Vai, a tribal language spoken in West Africa. They contacted the Liberian Embassy, she said, and courts in all but three states. Linguists estimate that 100,000 people speak Vai, mostly in Liberia and Sierra Leone.
LordofDaRing
Cassette Tape
 
Posts: 1011
Joined: Fri Mar 28, 2003 12:49 pm

Re: Justice for all

Postby Little Lenny » Mon Aug 06, 2007 8:31 pm

LordofDaRing wrote:Let's keep appointing Liberal judges:

A 7-year-old girl said she had been raped and repeatedly molested over the course of a year. Police in Montgomery County, acting on information from a relative, soon arrested a Liberian immigrant living in Gaithersburg. They marshaled witnesses and DNA evidence to prepare for trial.

What was missing -- for much of the nearly three years that followed -- was an interpreter fluent in the suspect's native language. A judge recently dropped the charges, not because she found that Mahamu Kanneh had been wrongly accused but because repeated delays in the case had, in her view, violated his right to a speedy trial.

"This is one of the most difficult decisions I've had to make in a long time," Katherine D. Savage said from the bench Tuesday, noting that she was mindful of "the gravity of this case and the community's concern about offenses of this type."

Loretta E. Knight, the Circuit Court clerk responsible for finding interpreters, said her office searched exhaustively for a speaker of Vai, a tribal language spoken in West Africa. They contacted the Liberian Embassy, she said, and courts in all but three states. Linguists estimate that 100,000 people speak Vai, mostly in Liberia and Sierra Leone.


that is wrong, it's right the law is an ass :-( poor little girl, and her poor parents must have gone through agony and trauma, yet the prisoners rights are paramount because a trial date was not quick enough...I don't know much about the legal system in the US, but if you don't mind me saying so that stinks!
User avatar
Little Lenny
Cassette Tape
 
Posts: 1156
Joined: Sat Jun 16, 2007 8:09 pm
Location: Kingston-upon-Hull City,East Yorkshire,ENGLAND


Return to Politics

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests