Home » Karmelo Anthony has been sentenced to 35 years

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Karmelo Anthony has been sentenced to 35 years — 10 Comments

  1. Anthony had been suspended recently for carrying a knife.
    Anthony was a captain on the football team and was on the track team.

    Obviously athletic, would indicate Anthony was no sissy,
    So, why did Anthony provoke an altercation and then not
    punch the victim in the face and attempt to beat him down
    like normal high school boys do every day?

    Fact that Anthony continued to carry a knife after previously
    being busted for it suggests he intended to use it on somebody, or was afraid of somebody.

    Wonder if Anthony had recently lost a fight to a white guy and was
    looking to recover respect from his peers.

  2. I have found out that you never argue with a bereaved family. It’s cruel and pointless. Mostly cruelly pointless or pointlessly cruel.
    Doesn’t apply to those not in the immediate family. They can be judged as if they’re being rational but wrong. Lying, possibly. Avoiding reality, maybe. Trying to make a false case depending on the “lineup”.

  3. Did karmelo’s parents teach him responsibility or blame racism? Please, we already know the answer to that.

  4. I just read that Karmie and family have already begun the process of filing for an appeal.

  5. Marisa:

    There was never any question that, if found guilty, they will appeal. That is their right.

    I had predicted the appeal will be on the grounds of no black people on the jury. There probably will be other grounds too.

  6. I can’t imagine what basis they can bring for an appeal, other than “racism” in selecting the jury. But when prospective jurors stated they couldn’t be objective in evaluating guilt, the prosecution rightly struck them from the jury.

    The evidence in this case was overwhelming. People who were surprised at the “guilty” verdict had never read about the facts or had not followed the reports of the testimony at the trial.

    A white youth who stabbed a black kid in similar circumstance would also have been convicted.

  7. In order for the death penalty to have any deterrent effect, it has to be understood as (a) a swiftly carried out sentence, preferably within weeks or months of conviction, and (b) done by some means other than lethal injection. With modern DNA testing the chances of wrongfully convicting a murderer have plummeted to next to zero, and hanging, firing squad, or the gas chamber are much more powerful statements of society’s “getting even” than humane euthanasia. The latter is for a beloved pet that is terminally ill, not someone who has intentionally killed another human being.

    I like the idea of hard labor. A convicted murderer spending 50 years of his life, 6 days a week, 10-12 hours a day with a sledgehammer turning great big rocks into piles of little tiny rocks. Given that criminals are generally on the left hand side of the bell curve, that might still be too abstract a concept to be a deterrent.

  8. “After the hearing, Anthony’s mother, Kala, and his brother blasted the killer’s conviction and sentence as “racist and biased” to cheering supporters who chanted “free Karmelo.”

    Some of Satan’s “useful idiots”…

  9. Kate

    I can’t imagine what basis they can bring for an appeal, other than “racism” in selecting the jury. But when prospective jurors stated they couldn’t be objective in evaluating guilt, the prosecution rightly struck them from the jury.

    If the appeal is a jury trial, rest assured that black prospective jurors will have learned to mask their feelings—that they could not vote to convict a “brother”—so that when questioned, they will answer that if the facts support a conviction, they will vote for conviction. And then when they vote against conviction, to state another reason for doing so. Provoked, what have you.

    Though it may be of interest that the 3 prospective jurors who were black were all educators.

    I found it interesting that of the blacks supporting his conviction online, either from video or from their blog posts, they were all male. I did not come across any black females online who supported the conviction.

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