IMO, he was sentenced to 13 years and he was never picked up. That sentence is either over now or soon will be. It is not the defendant's fault they were not picked up. No it is not their responsibility to do the state's job.
Do I think he got away with it? No, since he probably realized every day of his life for 13 years his life could be taken away.
Do I think the sentence should start from 0 and go for 13 years? No, I might make the case that psychologically screwing with a defendant only to incarcerate 13 years late is if not cruel, extremely unusual punishment.
Things I don't consider:
What the guy who pressed charges against him thinks now. Who cares? That's not how sentencing works and if it was, there would be a lot more people off of death row these days.
That the guy didn't actually serve jail time. That's not his job. And second guessing his lack of essentially asking to be incarcerated I find a bit silly. It doesn't serve his self interest since one could assume at least for the first four years he probably expected either his lawyer or the situation would result in his incarceration as it was an ongoing process. It is reasonable to assume he thought for a while there the system was just playing out. You don't penalize a guy for being an idiot.
That he could have become a criminal mastermind and gotten away with a dozen crimes by now. Speculation resulting in incarceration isn't a thing. And there's a reason in an actual court of law certain evidence gets tossed for being speculative.
Do I think he got away with it? No, since he probably realized every day of his life for 13 years his life could be taken away.
Do I think the sentence should start from 0 and go for 13 years? No, I might make the case that psychologically screwing with a defendant only to incarcerate 13 years late is if not cruel, extremely unusual punishment.
Things I don't consider:
What the guy who pressed charges against him thinks now. Who cares? That's not how sentencing works and if it was, there would be a lot more people off of death row these days.
That the guy didn't actually serve jail time. That's not his job. And second guessing his lack of essentially asking to be incarcerated I find a bit silly. It doesn't serve his self interest since one could assume at least for the first four years he probably expected either his lawyer or the situation would result in his incarceration as it was an ongoing process. It is reasonable to assume he thought for a while there the system was just playing out. You don't penalize a guy for being an idiot.
That he could have become a criminal mastermind and gotten away with a dozen crimes by now. Speculation resulting in incarceration isn't a thing. And there's a reason in an actual court of law certain evidence gets tossed for being speculative.
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