>>215969814
Prosecutor won't press charges.
Judge just puts him out on bond if they do press charges.
"Rehabilitative justice" is inherently pro-criminal.
>>215969303 (OP)
does he have that "walking while black" jew judge that's like five feet with glasses and that superjewish gremlin look >WHAT IS THIS NIGGERINO DOING WRONG.... THIEVING WHILE BLACK???? ARE YOU GUYS STUPID???????' RELEASE HIM!!
>What do you mean he was walking while black while in possession of an illegal firearm aka "glocky wit da switchy" at 2AM in a public park alone ????????????????????????????? FUCKING RACIST PIECE OF SHIT!!!!!
>>215970487 >Judge just puts him out on bond if they do press charges.
This is 100% dependent on jurisdiction. Most places give judges discretion to order a defendant held without bond (usually if they're dangerous or a flight risk) or set bail. Places without cash bail sometimes mandate pretrial detention under certain circumstances.
>>215970609
this is terminal-stages-of-communism type shit when people can just show up and get a paycheck without needing to do anything.
might not be the best idea to do this
If there's something useful for robots/AI to do, it would be replacing the joke of a justice system here. Fucking pathetic that all the steps involved are at some human's stupid bias when they should know better. The whole law and justice system entirely should be replaced now that I think about. Can't trust these faggots to not let the confirmed criminals worm their way out.
>>215971226
here 109 is local municipal and 111 is cyber police. but im assuming theyre in the US so its something different you'd just call the regular police >>215971274
maybe jap cops do this too, here if you get actually caught stealing a car you're done for
>>215971472 >maybe jap cops do this too, here if you get actually caught stealing a car you're done for
Yeah, but you don't like your golems having the same policy.
>>215969814
They could have fucked up collecting evidence, violated the defendant's rights, or mishandled evidence or paperwork. A prosecutor could have dropped some charges and offered plea deals. He's also a juvenile, so sentencing is different.
>>215972676 >He was released twice by judges
so it has nothing to do with his rights and everything to do with fat envelopes being handed off under a table.
>>215973252
Who's paying judges under the table? In a lot of places juvenile suspects are by default released to their parents unless there's a reason to detain them