steveincowtown wrote:Lano wrote: No winners at all.
I disagree, I think the winners were all the perp's future vicitms.
I am not saying this guy did the moral/correct thing, what I am saying is that should he really be convicted of the same crime that Charles Manson was?
If he had initially reacted with 2 to COM and 1 to the head, I would agree with you and say, No, he shouldn't be convicted of the same crime. But he didn't do that. He shot him once in the head, went outside, came
back inside a minute or two later, went behind the counter,
reloaded, came back
out from behind the counter, and executed the perp with 5 more shots to the body. That was a coup de grace. That is premeditated murder. Same as what Charles Manson did. The fact that the diseased was a dirtbag whom I wouldn't take the time to pee on if he were on fire is irrelevant.
WE don't get to play judge, jury, and executioner. We just don't. That we
don't get to do that is what makes us better than the piece of filth that he killed. When the pharmacist did what he did, he lowered himself to the same moral plane as the robbers. There is no reason for the court to extend him any particular mercy. In fact, if it weren't for the fact that the dead robber initiated the incident in the first place, the pharmacist might arguably deserve the death penalty. That's what we do with illegal executioners.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT