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Dual Standard of Justice
Letter to the Editor
When reading the crime and punishment section of my local newspaper (the business pages), I'm continually reminded of the gross inequities inherent in our criminal justice system.
Virtually every day there are reports of CEOs and directors of major corporations who are charged with misappropriation of funds and grand larceny -- on a grand scale.
More often than not, those charged with such offenses end up making a settlement or plea agreement. Usually, those agreements result in fines and/or monetary settlement of lawsuits that don't even begin to compensate victims of their crimes. Moreover, having agreed to huge multi-million-dollar settlements, there is usually a denial that there was any wrongdoing. To add further insult to injury, few are ever incarcerated.
If you hold up a convenience store, and you're caught, you'll have the cuffs snapped on your wrists, get thrown into the slammer, and almost surely will do time. If you are one of those 'pillars of society' who steals hundreds of millions of dollars from their companies and stockholders, cause job losses in the thousands and financially ruins many lives, you're more apt to first die from natural causes than you are to spend any time in prison.
There seems to be a double standard of justice in this country when it comes to punishment for theft: one for the landed gentry; one for the 'common criminal'.
Paul G. Jaehnert
Vadnais Hts., MN
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