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re: OSU Child Molester just quit the team hours before Super Regional
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:26 pm to anc
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:26 pm to anc
Just heard Tiki Barber doing one of those sports spots on the radio, about how we will never forgive or forget. Maybe he heard it to, and Tiki made that arse quit.
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:29 pm to thelawnwranglers
quote:
I guess you are going on notion he will do it again?
Odds are he will if given the chance
But even if he doesn't, he should have been sent to prison anyway
This post was edited on 6/9/17 at 6:38 pm
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:29 pm to anc
Some of you people sound just as bad as him.
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:30 pm to jlovel7
quote:
Glad to see compassion on the rant.
quote:
The girl told investigators that inside Heimlich's bedroom, he pulled down her underwear and "touched her on both the inside and outside of the spot she uses to go to the bathroom," according to court records.
"She said that she told him to stop, but he wouldn't," the documents state, and that "it hurt" when he touched her.
Prosecutors initially charged Heimlich with two counts of molestation for incidents between September 2009 and September 2010, and between September 2011 to December 2011. In Washington, child molestation in the first degree is a Class A felony.
"She said that the first time the respondent touched her she was four years old and that she was six years old the last time he did this," according to court records.
LINK
If this was a case of an 17-18 year old who got his with a sex offender charge for a one-time incident with his freshman girlfriend or something along those lines, I'd be far more sympathetic.
The type of incident that occurred with him is the type that usually has a higher case of recurrence since we're talking legitimate sexual molestation. Luckily the system caught him at a young enough age that it maybe stopped him from doing it to others.
So you'll have to forgive the lack of sympathy.
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:30 pm to Crimson Mafia IIIX
Most likely a future governor of Oregon!
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:31 pm to LSUcc
quote:Agreed.
Some of you people sound just as bad as him.
This outrage is retarded.
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:33 pm to anc
Smart move. Media will forget the faux outrage and he will be drafted in a few days. End of story now move along.
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:39 pm to Uncle Gunnysack
Can you read slapdick?
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:40 pm to BluegrassBelle
You missed this part.
What is the point of punishment if you are unable to move on once it is completed?
quote:
Research shows that the vast majority of juveniles convicted of sex crimes do not reoffend in subsequent years. After about three years, the likelihood of reoffending is "very small," said psychologist Michael Caldwell, who lectures at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
What is the point of punishment if you are unable to move on once it is completed?
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:43 pm to DAbully
No, he won't be drafted and any playing career he had hoped for is over
And I am very happy to know his career is dead before it starts
frick him, he should be dead or in prison, not playing professional sports
Oregon State’s Luke Heimlich removed from some MLB draft boards after revelation of molestation conviction
And I am very happy to know his career is dead before it starts
frick him, he should be dead or in prison, not playing professional sports
Oregon State’s Luke Heimlich removed from some MLB draft boards after revelation of molestation conviction
quote:
One American League general manager told Yahoo Sports his team “won’t go anywhere near” Heimlich following the report. Two other teams echoed those sentiments to Yahoo Sports, and Chicago Cubs GM Jed Hoyer told radio station 670-AM in Chicago that Heimlich “will be off our board, I think.” While another GM conceded his team was unlikely to fully remove Heimlich from its pool of potential picks, he said, “I can’t see us taking him.”
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:45 pm to dcbl
(no message)
This post was edited on 4/11/23 at 3:27 am
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:45 pm to Scruffy
He was 13
Ghe girl was 4
Then he did it again when he was 15 and she was 6
frick him, how can you defend him?

Ghe girl was 4
Then he did it again when he was 15 and she was 6
frick him, how can you defend him?

Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:46 pm to msutiger
Yea, no shite. The overreaction is insane.
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:46 pm to dcbl
quote:
how can you defend him?
Nobody in this thread is defending him.
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:47 pm to dcbl
quote:
dcbl
Ask Joe Mixon how that worked out for him, white knight. Personally I don't care of he does or doesn't get drafted but I believe he has a shot at the pros one day.
This post was edited on 6/9/17 at 6:48 pm
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:48 pm to Scruffy
quote:
You missed this part.
Nah. Juvenile offenders tend to respond better to treatment because they are still at a developmental stage where that behavior can be deterred. But only if they receive appropriate treatment. That said, what are we defining as sex crimes in those statistics? There's a distinct difference in the scenario I explained earlier and sexually molesting a toddler family member.
quote:
What is the point of punishment if you are unable to move on once it is completed?
You know why this all broke don't you? He didn't follow the conditions of his punishment to begin with.
Posted on 6/9/17 at 6:48 pm to dcbl
quote:I am not defending him. He was punished per the legal system. He served the sentence that was demanded of him by the legal system.
frick him, how can you defend him?
If we are unable to allow felons back into society after their fulfill their punishments, what is the point of the punishment to begin with?
Why even try to rehabilitate anyone if that is the case?
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