I'm no right-wing zealot, and I seriously thought twice about starting this, but it makes me want to scream at the sky it's so tragic so I'm venting here..
The essential torture ot death of this poor boy by these people is horrific, and one of them will probably be out in under a year.
I can't help but feel but this level of cruelty deserves far harsher punishment than this. The living hell that kid must have experienced just chills me to the bone.
How can that level of evil go as good as unpunished in a civilised society?
You are the dreamer, and the dream...
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Meanwhile, no matter when they are released, the perpetrators will struggle to find employment anywhere.
Remember, it's easier to criticise than create!
Remember, it's easier to criticise than create!
Seriously: If you value it, take/fetch it yourself
The Attorney General’s Office said 141 prison terms were increased in England and Wales in 2016 under the Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme. Up by 39 from 2015, it represented a 17 per cent rise from the previous year.
Among the sentences that were increased, 41 were sex offences, 16 associated with robbery and 19 were grievous bodily harm cases. Fourteen sex offenders are now serving time, when they had originally been let off prison sentences.
Sex offender Duncan Waterhouse, described as a “predatory paedophile and a dangerous offender” by police had his eight-year sentence increased to 12 years after his conviction for assaulting four girls.
A spokesperson for the Attorney General’s Office said: “The original sentence did not reflect the very significant impact the offending had upon his victims and their families.”
Other convicted criminals including an arsonist, a person carrying a firearm and two men guilty of child neglect, had their community sentences overturned. They were placed in immediate custody as a result.
The Attorney General Jeremy Wright QC, told the BBC: "The Unduly Lenient Sentence scheme allows victims of crime, their families and the public to challenge sentences that they believe are too low, and last year we saw a record number of sentences increased."
In a separate report, he had earlier said: "A sentencing exercise is not an exact science and in the vast majority of cases, judges get it right.
Remember, it's easier to criticise than create!