Sep 032011
 

I have blogged before about the death sentence (and possibly other entries too) but people are still being executed, so there is no reason why I should stop ranting about this. Hopefully this entry will be a little more fact-orientated than previous attempts.

Execution is one of those contentious issues, and in a country that has long banned the death sentence the whole debate starts up again when we discover people such as Harold Shipman and Fred West. It is difficult to argue against the death sentence when such creatures are in the news, but it has to be done.

If You Execute Criminals, You Also Kill The Innocent

Criminal justice systems are run by fallible people; no matter how hard we try, people will always make mistakes and some of those mistakes can cause disastrous consequences – and in the case where criminals are sentenced to death, it is not just possible, but really has happened that innocent people are killed by the government. Detailed statistics on this are practically impossible to locate – partially because we don’t know who has been executed for a crime they have not committed.

All we know is that some people have been executed because they were innocent, and some people were executed because they did not receive a fair trial. For instance, take the case of Sacco and Vanzetti where two men were executed in 1927, but in 1977 the governor of Massachusetts admitted that they had received an unfair trial and that “any disgrace should be forever removed from their names.”. This coming despite the possibility that Sacco was in fact guilty of the crime – ballistic tests on his gun in 1961 indicated it was used in the killings although it had been interfered with enough that any prosecution based on those ballistic tests would be unfair.

So here we have a case where two men were executed – one who was innocent and received an unfair trial, and another at worst received an unfair trial. And of course these two anarchists were involved in a particularly well publicised case – how many others executed have received no help in establishing their innocence ?

Of course other people have tried coming up with useful statistics, and I will myself …

Out of a list of 33 “notable” executions in the UK since 1910, 6 were of people had their convictions quashed posthumously. This gives a rate of 18% of executions being of innocent people! An alternative figure of 632 executions in the UK between 1900 and 1949, would reduce the false execution rate to 1%. Neither of these figures is satisfactory, although the second is probably closer to the mark – although it misses out the number of executions between 1950 onwards, the figure for the number of innocent people executed is probably also not complete.

But it does illustrate that of all executions, some include innocent victims – perhaps 1%. Or in other words, out of every 100 people executed, at least 1 person is innocent of the crime he or she is executed for.

Perhaps you might think that 1 out of every 100 people executed is a small price to pay, but consider how you would feel if that innocent person was someone you loved more than your own life ? Your husband, your wife, your son, or your daughter. How would you feel then ?

Every innocent victim of the hangman’s noose is someone’s loved one.

But We’ll Only Do It For The Really Bad

If you restrict executions to the really heinous crimes where you are really sure that the criminal is guilty, what happens ?

Well firstly, it does not stop innocent people from being executed. Take the example of Timothy Evans, a man who was initially found guilty of murdering his own daughter (and he was suspected of killing his wife too); yet three years later it was discovered that his neighbour John Christie was a serial killer and eventually shown to have killed the daughter and wife. Timothy Evans was eventually pardoned in 1966. Of course it was a bit late for him as he had already been executed.

No matter how certain you are that someone is guilty of a crime, there is always the chance that they are not in fact guilty.

Secondly, it is a slippery slope – if you execute someone for committing a really nasty murder, it becomes easier to allow executions for “less serious” murders, and then so-called lesser crimes. As an example of this in action, see the Bloody Code article where the UK in little more than 100 years went from 50 crimes punishable by death, to 220 crimes punishable by death.

Life Imprisonment Is Cheaper

This is actually an argument in favour of abolishing the death sentence, but a despicable one.

It is true that in the US today, it is probably cheaper to imprison someone for life rather than sentence someone to death. This is because most death sentences go through an excruciating process involving many appeals to all parts of the criminal justice system. If us woolly liberals would just shut up about the death sentence, it would be possible to execute people very cheaply.

But we’re not going to shut up about it.

And looking at the money involved is contemptible – this discussion is about justice, mercy, and all sorts of ideals. If society cannot afford a just criminal justice system, it can no longer be called a society.

Cruel And Unusual Punishment

No matter the method a country chooses to execute a criminal, it amounts to cruel and unusual punishment – prohibited by the UN (article 4 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, although I’ve used the traditional English phrase rather than the wording of the UN). The reasons why the death sentence is inhuman is varied, but includes :-

  1. Most people sentenced to death spend a long time on death row awaiting execution – an average of 14 years in 2009 (and the link contains other interesting information). The reasons for this are irrelevant. The effect on the prisoner amounts to psychological torture sufficient that many on death row have requested rapid execution to end their suffering – even prisoners who were eventually found innocent.
  2. We may have moved on from impaling, or other forms of execution that take the victim many days to die, but that does not mean the current methods are humane – even the “most humane” method of lethal injection has those who claim it causes unnecessary suffering in some cases.
  3. There is a degree of arbitrariness in how the death penalty is applied leading – a serial killer with 48 victims to his name can “get off” with life imprisonment whilst someone who has killed just one victim is executed. The more you dig into just how arbitrary the death sentence is, the more you should get concerned about it. Shouldn’t justice be even-handed ?

Final Word

This may not be the final version of this blog – as things occur to me, as I get the incentive to write, and as facts crop up I will be adding to it. But for now it is enough.

This probably won’t convince anyone in favour of the death sentence to give up and start opposing it, but it might encourage those who are undecided to look a bit deeper and come down in favour of abolishing it.

Sep 012011
 

As some of you already know, the trip to Ilfracombe was a touch on the wet side so the number of photos to sort through was fewer than expected. However I think a small number turned out ok …

#1: Lundy

Lundy

That funny lump on the horizon is probably Lundy island – famous haunt of pirates and sea birds.

#2: Incoming Rain

Incoming Rain

There were quite a lot of opportunities to shoot photos like this, but perhaps you’ll see that inclement weather sometimes makes for better images.

#3: Dark Harbour

Dark Harbour

This is the closest I have of a photo of Ilfracombe itself. Not just in the ones I thought to put up online, but even amongst the raw images!

#4: The Gentle Coast

Gentle Coast

Aug 312011
 

I became aware of this story through an article on The Register – to summarise the facts, a woman bought what turned out to be a stolen laptop, and whilst using it to conduct a certain kind of webchat with her boyfriend, an employee of Absolute Software used previously installed software on the stolen laptop to ‘grab’ several items of data including screenshots of the webchat session.

Even if someone unintentionally using a stolen laptop cannot expect reasonable levels of privacy (and the Judge doesn’t believe that their privacy should have been breached), ordinary human decency should have been enough to exclude the naked pics. Anyone involved in the security world (including IT security) should be aware that anyone using a stolen laptop may well not be the person who stole the laptop and may be guilty of no more than stupidity by buying a stolen laptop.

Such stupidity deserves punishment, but the loss of the laptop is punishment enough – having naked pics of yourself passed around a bunch of geeks and then shown to the police is going just a little too far. And what about the boyfriend ? He didn’t have anything to do with the stolen laptop, so why were Absolute Software stealing naked pics of him?

Once you have a timestamp and a network address of the stolen laptop, that is sufficient in almost all cases to identify who to talk to about the laptop. Grabbing screenshots of a webcam chat is merely prurient voyeurism of the same order of magnitude as setting up network webcams in a shop changing room.

But there is more to this than just the salacious details of the kind of pictures captured. Who owns the data on that laptop ? Well all of the data on the laptop at the time it was stolen surely belongs to the owner of that laptop (unless of course they have been stealing data themselves!), but any data created since then does not. And that surely includes screenshots of what activities are shown on screen.

If Absolute Software had chosen to activate the webcam to grab pictures of the person using the laptop rather than grab screenshots, they would have been on slightly less shaky ground because they would then be creating data and not stealing data. And of course they would not have grabbed a naked pic of an entirely innocent man! However they should also have the decency to ensure that any images they grabbed didn’t contain an ‘unusual’ amount of skin exposed.

Plus of course by grabbing any sort of image from a webcam could put the employees of Absolute Software at risk of creating and viewing child porn – not everyone engaged in ‘adult’ webchats is necessarily over the age of consent!

Aug 202011
 

Now that some time has passed, it is time to rethink thoughts about the riots in the UK. Everyone (including me) reacted very quickly in the wake of the riots in London and elsewhere with their immediate reactions. Not always with impressive results, and indeed even those who had a reasonable point to make would probably agree that the situation is more complex than at first supposed.

Was It Really That Bad ?

Well of course it was to those who were actually caught up in the riots, but sometimes we get the impression (especially amongst the more … excitable foreign bloggers) that the rioting was worse than it actually was. For instance the London riots involved 22 districts out of a total of 326 districts, or in other words only 6.7% of London by area was involved in the rioting. And that’s an exaggeration – for instance my brother lives in Enfield which saw two nights of rioting, but hardly saw a thing other than the Sony warehouse burning in the distance.

Or by population, the police estimate that up to 3,000 people will be charged with various offences relating to the riots. Let us assume that only 1/5 of the people involved in the riots will ever be charged with anything – that adds up to a total number of rioters of 15,000. Given the population of London is 12.58 million, only 0.11% of the population was rioting. Even if I’m out by a factor of 10 (so there were really 150,000 rioters), that would still be only 1.1% of the population were rioting.

Even if you assume all those 15,000 rioters were from Croyden (a place with some of the most serious riots), a place with a population of around 330,000 people, we find that 15,000 out of 330,000 gives a percentage of 4.5% – so even when we over inflate the figures for rioters ridiculously, we still get a tiny proportion who actually took part.

So what we saw recently, was the result of a tiny proportion of the population. Even amongst young people, the majority were appalled at what they were seeing and what is less commonly reported is that the volunteers who turned out to cleanup the mess caused by the rioters included even more young people than took part in the riots.

One of the other things that doesn’t get so well reported is that the rioters were not all young people – there were more “mature” adults in the mix as well. It also wasn’t particularly racial either – all “races” were involved in the rioting.

So what about the underlying causes for the riots ?

No Excuses: They Were All Just Criminal Thugs

Well, there’s no arguing with the fact that the rioters were criminal thugs … or at least the worst ones were. But just disregarding underlying causes is the action of the feeble-minded. Why were these criminals rioting this year and not last year ? Or the year before ?

There is some underlying reason why the riots occurred this year and not in other years. Whatever underlying causes turned these people into rioters should be examined to see if there’s a viable method of stopping that from happening – whilst they may be rioters this year, even without riots they are likely to be creating trouble of some kind at any point in time. Theft, burglary, assault, etc.

Police Brutality

The riots started with what began as a peaceful protest into the shooting by police of someone called Mark Duggan. If there had not been a shooting, there probably would not have been a peaceful protest about the shooting. Which in turn would not have descended into rioting, which in turn would not have caused what we could call “copy-cat” riots elsewhere.

So in a sense the “police brutality” in shooting Mark Duggan did cause the rioting, but the later riots were not in support of Mark Duggan at all – they were simply acquisitive and destructive riots. It could have been any cause triggering them – a protest at the killing of anyone, a demonstration against student fees, protests against the globalisation culture, etc.

Whereas there may be a problem relating to the shooting of Mark Duggan, and we can regard that as the trigger for the later riots, in no way can the shooting be described as the cause of the riots.

Economy

This is my favourite underlying cause as I have made the point before.

In summary, the rioters are to some extent economically disadvantaged but that is not why they rioted. The poor (unless they are exceptionally so), can put up with their situation if they see there is hope of improvement. For the young, this means seeing opportunities for improvement – that they can get a job, can pursue self-improvement through education, etc. If they do not have hope, this leads to frustration with their situation exacerbated when they see others improving their lot.

Not all of the “hopeless” riot of course, so again there are other reasons as to why the rioters were made into rioters.

Parental Failure

This is of course the favourite excuse for the “family values” politicians … frequently coming up with this without checking any of the evidence. And they usually get a dig in at “failed” families too – single parent families.

Maybe it’s true that all of the rioters came from single parent families where the remaining parent has poor parenting skills. Although I have not seen any evidence of this … one or two examples that may have come to light do not make a trend. Even if it is poor parenting contributing to the riots, the answer to this problem is not going to be simple.

One of the most obvious answers is to provide “alternative” families … young people below a certain age (say 16) are always grouping together to form a pseudo-family of sorts whether they need one or not. If we’re worried about gangs and gang culture, we need to provide alternative groups for young people to join; if they are not joining the ones that already exist then there is something wrong with the ones that exist.

Gun Control

Probably one of the most bizarre and offbeat claims was that the UK’s gun control laws helped kick off the riots … which is patently ridiculous. After all the US (with somewhat more lax gun control than the UK) has had riots itself, and gun control didn’t seem to stop the looting then.

Besides which there is an assumption that the shopkeepers whose shops were looted were present and able to defend their property … if only they had had guns! Well it turns out that most shopkeepers were not present, and some shopkeepers did protect their property, and without the assistance of guns.

So the presence of someone prepared to face down the rioters, sometimes stops those rioters. Whether or not guns are available.

Where’s The Enquiry ?

One of the most bizarre reactions to the riots has been to pointedly refuse to hold a public inquiry into what is going on. No matter how “wise” someone is, they cannot know all of the answers to the riots. Or if they do, why were they not able to stop them in the first place ? I have fairly strong opinions as to why these riots started, but I would love for an inquiry to get to the bottom of the causes.

Apart from anything else, it would be a great opportunity to say “I told you so”.

But more importantly, it would be an opportunity to get to the root causes of the problems with evidence to those causes. The riots are a symptom of an underlying problem, or far more likely a number of underlying problems all combining into the riots. These underlying problems undoubtedly have other outcomes than the riots.

Fixing the underlying problems will not only make future riots less likely, but will also improve our society in other ways.