January 23: Difference between revisions

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==Events==
==Events==
*  [[BoyWiki:Current events | Current events]]
*  [[BoyWiki:Current events | Current events]]
*1978 - '''A more reasonable vision of the law as it should be''' - In a discussion of a New York statute concerning consensual sodomy published by the New York Law Journal on this date, Judge Taylor argued that private, intimate, consensual sexual conduct not harmful to others does not violate public morality and is protected by the right to privacy. Further, he argued that a minor cannot be treated as a delinquent by the courts if the behavior in question is legal if carried out by adults. This interpretation of the law, as well as others, have been seen as ones that protect the right of privacy for minors in a way that could be construed to cover even their freedom to engage in sexual activity. At the very least, it strongly suggests that a case for harm in a sexual relationship is necessary to establish before being able to treat it as criminal, and should not be the default position.<ref name="tdiphjan23">{{cite news  |author= Author unknown|title=''This Day In Pedo History: January 23''  |date=2003 |accessdate= 3-10-15}} </ref>
*2002 - '''What? We have to prove something now? Damn!''' - The Supreme Court of the United States upheld the Kansas "sex predator" law in 1997, a law that allowed the indefinite confinement of "violent sex offenders" beyond their prison terms if they suffer from mental abnormalities making them likely to commit similar crimes in the future. On this date the Supreme Court ruled that the States would actually be required to prove that an offender has a mental illness that causes serious difficulty with self control before being able to lock them up, reversing what had been common practice in many states. They decided that child molesters and other sex criminals must be treated the same as other people singled out for involuntary commitment. "They created a new subclass of people and felt that because of the nature of their crimes, that in and of itself was enough to justify hustling them off to a mental hospital without proving a serious mental illness," said Kansas lawyer John Donham, who won the case on behalf of his client, a convicted sex offender who was held after his sentenced had expired.<ref name="tdiphjan23" />


== Births ==
== Births ==
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==Deaths==
==Deaths==
*January 23, [[2014]] - Jesse Ryan Loskarn, 35, (chief of staff to Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn) <ref name="Loskarn" >http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/196346-senate-staffer-arrested-on-child-pornography-charges-found-dead</ref>




==References==
{{reflist}}
==External links==
==External links==
 
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Latest revision as of 17:30, 11 March 2015

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Events


  • 1978 - A more reasonable vision of the law as it should be - In a discussion of a New York statute concerning consensual sodomy published by the New York Law Journal on this date, Judge Taylor argued that private, intimate, consensual sexual conduct not harmful to others does not violate public morality and is protected by the right to privacy. Further, he argued that a minor cannot be treated as a delinquent by the courts if the behavior in question is legal if carried out by adults. This interpretation of the law, as well as others, have been seen as ones that protect the right of privacy for minors in a way that could be construed to cover even their freedom to engage in sexual activity. At the very least, it strongly suggests that a case for harm in a sexual relationship is necessary to establish before being able to treat it as criminal, and should not be the default position.[1]
  • 2002 - What? We have to prove something now? Damn! - The Supreme Court of the United States upheld the Kansas "sex predator" law in 1997, a law that allowed the indefinite confinement of "violent sex offenders" beyond their prison terms if they suffer from mental abnormalities making them likely to commit similar crimes in the future. On this date the Supreme Court ruled that the States would actually be required to prove that an offender has a mental illness that causes serious difficulty with self control before being able to lock them up, reversing what had been common practice in many states. They decided that child molesters and other sex criminals must be treated the same as other people singled out for involuntary commitment. "They created a new subclass of people and felt that because of the nature of their crimes, that in and of itself was enough to justify hustling them off to a mental hospital without proving a serious mental illness," said Kansas lawyer John Donham, who won the case on behalf of his client, a convicted sex offender who was held after his sentenced had expired.[1]

Births

Deaths

  • January 23, 2014 - Jesse Ryan Loskarn, 35, (chief of staff to Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn) [2]


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Author unknown. "This Day In Pedo History: January 23", 2003. Retrieved on 3-10-15. 
  2. http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/196346-senate-staffer-arrested-on-child-pornography-charges-found-dead

External links