Young woman steals police car-- must be a better way to get a ride home...
She denied stealing the car, which an officer reminded her was in front of 30 police cars, and they showed restraint, and the court showed mercy with a three year sentence. Hopefully, she will find help, and make Christian friends, and not more suffering while under state care, to encourage healthy life-changes, which is proven in management experience to be accomplished by positive reinforcement, and not negative. This is how divine psychology works too-- a young lady who has likely suffered all of her life, will not be helped to change by being punished more for the sake of community punishment. But, in my opinion, her unexplainable act of stealing a police car was likely a way to ask for help, and according to the Bible verse, "...all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose," (Romans 8:28; KJV) will work in her favor, if she is given a chance to discover the power of the Gospel, instead of the power of the law, and of a high-powered police car.
It's a pretty serious offense, but still, I believe young women should not be discriminated against by being given equal sentences as men, because they are not equal and are more vulnerable, and therefore deserve greater mercy from the law and their community. In my opinion, according to new justice reform ideas, because prisons can be extremely dangerous, and even deadly for young people, she should have been given one year in a revised prison environment (designed for the 21st Century), offered Christian counseling, and 1 year of in-house, supervised probation to tell, and teach other young women positive examples such as getting a GED, teaching driver's education.
She denied stealing the car, which an officer reminded her was in front of 30 police cars, and they showed restraint, and the court showed mercy with a three year sentence. Hopefully, she will find help, and make Christian friends, and not more suffering while under state care, to encourage healthy life-changes, which is proven in management experience to be accomplished by positive reinforcement, and not negative. This is how divine psychology works too-- a young lady who has likely suffered all of her life, will not be helped to change by being punished more for the sake of community punishment. But, in my opinion, her unexplainable act of stealing a police car was likely a way to ask for help, and according to the Bible verse, "...all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose," (Romans 8:28; KJV) will work in her favor, if she is given a chance to discover the power of the Gospel, instead of the power of the law, and of a high-powered police car.
It's a pretty serious offense, but still, I believe young women should not be discriminated against by being given equal sentences as men, because they are not equal and are more vulnerable, and therefore deserve greater mercy from the law and their community. In my opinion, according to new justice reform ideas, because prisons can be extremely dangerous, and even deadly for young people, she should have been given one year in a revised prison environment (designed for the 21st Century), offered Christian counseling, and 1 year of in-house, supervised probation to tell, and teach other young women positive examples such as getting a GED, teaching driver's education.