To me jail should be a place where inmates have no internet, tv, etc....and are worked until exhausted doing hard labor...shouldn't be a free gym membership with a tattoo parlor
then don't....talk about subjects and not about me for a change and you'll see a difference..or not....I'm not making dumb charts about your posts...you make it personal
That would be difficult in death row...everday would be filled with that fear...I don't think a non violent prisoner who cheated on his taxes or sold some pot should be lumped in with a rapist or murderer...jailers should control prison violence but....they usually don't
Maybe stuff like this crosses your mind. But the average person has no issues with women speaking their mind, nor standing up/speaking out for what they believe in. This type of thought process you referenced is thankfully is dying off. As the generations who thought this way are entering retirement, already retired or in some cases already gone.
Meanwhile, judging in San Francisco... Notorious SF convict and firebug is back in jail — accused of attempted murder, arson By Evan Sernoffsky David Munoz Diaz, charged with murder in the June 10, 2011, killing of Freddy Roberto Canul-Arguello. He was arrrested Thursday on suspicion of attempted murder and arson charges. A San Francisco man with convictions in high-profile arson cases, including one in which he burned the body of a sexual partner, was arrested this week on suspicion of attempted murder as well as several counts of arson, authorities said. David Munoz Diaz, 28, was booked into San Francisco County Jail at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, records show. Police did not immediately provide details about his latest alleged crime. Diaz is well-known to city law enforcement. He was arrested and charged with murder in the June 2011 death of Freddy Canul-Arguello after the victim’s body was found burned in Buena Vista Park. A San Francisco Superior Court jury, however, cleared Diaz of the murder allegation in 2014 while returning a guilty verdict on a lesser charge of involuntary manslaughter. Diaz was also convicted of arson and sentenced to time served. Diaz’s attorneys had argued that he accidentally killed Canul-Arguello while choking him during a sexual encounter at a hook-up spot, and then ignited the fire to signal help. Though the jury came back with an arson conviction, Judge Donald Sullivan set it aside over prosecutors’ objections, noting that Diaz had no previous criminal record and was unlikely to set another fire. Had Diaz been convicted of arson, he would have been forced to register in a state arsonist database. Shortly after Diaz’s release from jail, San Francisco authorities responded to a string of arson fires that terrorized the Castro district over a four-month period, starting in late 2014. Many of these fires remain unsolved. But in January 2015, Diaz was charged with setting a fire that month at Up Hair salon in the Castro, which was owned by his boyfriend. Diaz was also charged with a December 2014 fire that damaged the boyfriend’s car and a third count of possessing of an incendiary device. Diaz was convicted in the case, sentenced to a year of mandatory supervision in September 2016, and required to register as an arsonist. Two months later, he was accused of a vicious attack in San Francisco in which he allegedly handcuffed the victim, bit a chunk out of his scalp, cut his tongue and slit his nose, ear and lip. Diaz pleaded guilty to false imprisonment and was sentenced to five years of probation. Evan Sernoffsky is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: @EvanSernoffsky