[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[ale] [OT] RIP Aaron Swartz
- Subject: [ale] [OT] RIP Aaron Swartz
- From: mbt at naunetcorp.com (Michael B. Trausch)
- Date: Sat, 19 Jan 2013 16:57:56 -0500
- In-reply-to: <1358049260.3006.44330.camel@dellberry>
- References: <1358049260.3006.44330.camel@dellberry>
On 01/12/2013 10:54 PM, Tim Watts wrote:
> I don't contend that the prosecutor could have / should have foreseen
> this outcome. What sickens me is the enormous talent we've lost because
> of a prosecutor with no sense of proportion. Even if Mr. Swartz hadn't
> killed himself would it really have been necessary to waste such a
> talent with a 35 year sentence for a single misguided prank? Even
> JSTOR, the victim, declined to press charges for his crime and asked the
> feds to drop it. The federal prosecutor's name is Carmen Ortiz if
> anyone's interested.
Since I learned of this it has been something that I have continued to
think about.
Looking at the application of the CFAA-1986 over the years, there seems
to be a trend of lesser severity crimes being met with harsher and
harsher sentences. It really is insane. You often get less time for
the careless operation of a motor vehicle that leads to a loss of life
than you could for walking into an unlocked closet, hooking up a network
connection and sucking bits across a network?
I mean, seriously, I don't care what the information is---how is it that
it could possibly warrant such harsh penalties? How is that not "cruel
and unusual" punishment?
What a damned shame.
--- Mike