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Prosecutor says she never asked for maximum penalty against Aaron Swartz
By adamg on Thu, 01/17/2013 - 8:47am
WBUR posts a statement by US Attorney Carmen Ortiz.
Meanwhile, a California congresswoman is proposing changes to the law used to go after Swartz to try to keep anybody else from going through what he did.
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I'm curious
if Mr. Swartz had been a complete nobody, without his pedigree so-to-speak, would this congresswoman, or 99.9% of the population, have given a rat's you-know-what about him killing himself? How many suicides of good people, some even 'brilliant' like Aaron Swartz, have occurred in the congresswoman's home state and the rest of the country over the past 7 days?
No, I'm not denigrating Aaron Swartz's memory. May he R.I.P.
The converse is probably also true
Would the U.S.D.A. have pressed the case so aggressively, in light of JSTOR's refusal to pursue it, if Swartz had not been so well known?
wait...
are we still talking about the legal system or have we moved on to agriculture and livestock chatter?
Probably being trolled here, but
United States District Attorney
No district in the middle of the title
Proper title is United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts.
If that were the case he absoulutely would have served
some jail time. No, the U.S. Attorney's Office would have probably passed on it, or maybe take it because it would be an easy feather in their cap seeing the defendant didn't have any of the obvious privileges Aaron Swartz had.
nobodies get prosecuted every day
The ignorance of some people is amazing.
maximum penalty not the issue
But, of course, bullies always have their petty little distracting excuses for their excessive and narcissistic and sociopathic excesses, now don't they?
She didn't say she asked for anything less either
Her statement is worded like you might expect from a top lawyer - it has a lot of words, but doesn't mean much. She said she never asked for the maximum. But she didn't say how much she did ask for - she could have asked for 34 years instead of 35, and her statement today would be factually true. All the press releases her office put out stressed that the maximum penalty would be 35 years and a million dollar fine. It's pretty disingenuous for her to try to claim she wasn't holding that threat over his head.
Part of the reason the maximum is so high is that her office piled on 9 felony charges after the original charges, many of which were overlapping. If she actually thought 35 years was excessive, she didn't need to pile on all those charges.
She does an amazing job of shifting all the blame on Congress for passing the laws, and the judge who would have been choosing the sentencing. "Don't blame me, I was just following orders," seems to be her message.
Meanwhile, her corporate whore husband ...
... went twitting about how it was soooooooooo unfair that the press release by Aaron's family didn't mention the 6 month plea offer!
Imagine! A grieving family of a person hounded and harassed by his wife didn't THINK OF POOR PITIFUL CARMEN ORTIZ in a memorial statment!!!
Asshole.
And we all know who else was
And we all know who else was just following orders...
//Yes, Godwin's Law
That's Not True at All
Did you read the statement, or even Swartz's lawyer's statements? He was offered six months in minimum security, aka Club Fed, and no fine.
and a life sentence
... to "being a convicted terrorist".
Apologists, do dream on.
Whose words are those?
Who are you quoting when you say
?
It doesn't need quoting
But "terrorist" is the wrong word. Convicted felon, yes, and that's bad enough in American society.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collateral_consequen...(U.S.)
Of course, with the way the DOJ works these days, they're almost synonyms, so perhaps the point is moot.
The best thing I read about his lawyers...
http://boston.com/metrodesk/2013/01/14/mit-hacking...
I'm not a genius or a lawyer, but a letter writing campaign as your defense? WTF.
7-8 years
http://patterico.com/2013/01/14/wall-street-journa...
7-8 years.....
If he was found guilty of all charges. Of laws and penalties set by lawmakers. And he still had the chance to take 6 months and be a hero to apparently a lot of people.
Was he guilty? I still fail to see the outrage. People want to be civilly disobedient but don't want to admit to what they think is right, nor do they accept the punishment.
You can't have your cake and eat it too.
7-8 Recommendation
It wasn't even guaranteed that he'd get 7-8 yrs, just that the prosecutor would recommend it. He'd have to be convicted by a jury of all the charges, including all the ones that everyone says are overcharged and inappropriate, and the judge would have to impose exactly what the prosecutor recommended, which no judge ever does.
Or 6 months, which we now learn was actually 4-6 months, and that was the recommendation, which the judge would again have to go along with for him to get that sentence while his attorney recommends probation.
So as someone else said, apologists, do dream on.
And what about the others
involved in this who influenced heavily Mr. Swartz? May be 'mentors' like Professor Lessig shouldn't encourage any behavior he himself wouldn't risk doing, rather than just use this young man's suicide as an opportunity to make him a martyr for a cause?
Wow, now we're attacking Lessig?
And just what do you think Lessig's agenda is?
Before you reply, I'd point out that one of the things Lessig advocates for is your ability to do exactly what you're doing now - posting unsubstantiated drivel on the Internet without having to even offer up a name.
I caught a blog that talked about that.
He makes some sense.
http://3dblogger.typepad.com/wired_state/2013/01/l...
Y'know, I'm sensitive to victim blaming...
I'm sensitive to victim blaming, but...good grief:
A female student flagged down an NUPD officer on Forsyth Street and reported that on Monday, Jan. 7 in a room in Hayden Hall during a scheduled class, she encountered a man, roughly 6’2” in height, who appeared “grungy,” wearing dirty gray sweatpants with a larger rip near the inner thigh and a dirty gray sweatshirt sitting inside the class. She stated the man informed her he was a teacher’s aid and offered her tutoring sessions. She then gave him her phone number and reported that, after further thought, she started to feel uneasy, thinking he may not have been who he said he was.
On the plus side: life lesson, no harm done, I guess.