I'm not. We require a trial with a jury of one's peers and a conviction beyond a reasonable doubt for EACH crime alleged. And yes, you can be dragged back into court for other crimes that come out during testimony. And we have statutes of limitation to prevent what you suggest; prosecutors sitting on a charge until the defendant finishes a previous sentence. Once the prosecution becomes aware of a crime, they only have a limited time to charge the defendant, which is consistent with the administration of justice.mistermack wrote:In the English system, if you get convicted of a crime such as this, you can ASK for other similar cases to be taken into consideration, prior to sentencing. That's obviously what happened here. They can't be taken into account against your wishes. That would be ridiculous.
If you don't, there's every chance that you can be arrested leaving prison, and charged with the second offence. And again with the third.
It's a chance to wipe the slate, and many take it.
I'm surprised you don't have it.
The problem with your system is that a) it wipes the slate clean, which denies victims their right to be heard and receive justice for their injury, and b) it allows judges to "stack" penalties without the necessity of proving guilt and in ways that may be outside of the just sentence for each of the individual crimes.
Thanks for pointing out that adding crimes in this manner is voluntary, that's an important point.
Seth wrote: Problem is, give the courts/government the power to protect people using the criminal laws in this manner and it very soon results in the widespread suppression of free political and social expression, to the detriment of the rights of the people to speak out against their government. That's precisely why we tolerate offensive speech to such a great degree.
The hell it doesn't. It's illegal to hold a protest within one KM of Parliament. No such law would pass Constitutional scrutiny here. And one of the main reasons the US exists is precisely because Britain suppressed political and social expression in the Colonies.That's the theory. It doesn't happen here in Britain, in practice.
Unless they collude with the government to suppress free expression, which they are not prohibited from doing.Because of the reasons I laid out.
The courts and the prosecution service are there to make sure it doesn't happen.
Which does fuck-all good to those already prosecuted and imprisoned for breaking the previous law.And if it did, the law can be amended at any time.
Right up until they do. Nothing in your law prevents Parliament from passing a law completely removing the privilege of free speech in the UK, because you have no supreme document that constrains your government from doing so. We do.The courts and the legislature take free speech seriously, and won't see the law abused.
Indeed. Well, not "just."It's just a case of where the line is drawn.