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If there were 2,000,000 innocent and only 1 guilty, retrying everyone would not be practical. Burr Send a noteboard - 05/03/2010 09:22:16 PM
There is some percentage at which it becomes either more practical or more ethical (or both) to release everyone.

It is an important question because of its implications for determining what counts as having been rehabilitated. If you have 100,000 thieves with an average 5% probability of reoffending, then you know about 99,500 of them are rehabilitated and 500 of them aren't, but you can't necessarily identify which ones are which. Is it practical or ethical to continue the imprisonment of 99,500 rehabilitated prisoners just because you can't identify the 500 non-rehabilitated prisoners? If so, then what if the probability of reoffending were even less, so that there were only 1 non-rehabilitated prisoner among two million rehabilitated prisoners? At what percentage does the balance lie?
||||||||||*MySmiley*
Only so evil.
This message last edited by Burr on 05/03/2010 at 09:27:46 PM
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A level-of-comfort question regarding imprisonment of mixed innocent and guilty groups. - 05/03/2010 02:39:53 AM 326 Views
100% - 05/03/2010 03:47:31 AM 211 Views
Law of averages says there are certainly many innocent people in prison. - 05/03/2010 04:09:41 AM 197 Views
Doesn't matter - 05/03/2010 04:22:19 AM 186 Views
It does, in so far as it makes appeals a necessary option. - 05/03/2010 04:35:13 AM 189 Views
Did I say they weren't? - 05/03/2010 05:52:18 AM 216 Views
Nope. - 15/03/2010 06:14:33 AM 167 Views
You know Scalia said something like that last year - 05/03/2010 04:37:00 PM 195 Views
'Something'? Quotes are nice - 05/03/2010 05:07:00 PM 181 Views
Clarification: X% of them definitely did not meet the standards of reasonable doubt. - 05/03/2010 09:44:09 PM 171 Views
It's a pointless question - 06/03/2010 06:36:08 AM 172 Views
I never really liked silly questions like this - 05/03/2010 02:23:36 PM 205 Views
If there were 2,000,000 innocent and only 1 guilty, retrying everyone would not be practical. - 05/03/2010 09:22:16 PM 177 Views
That's silly though - 05/03/2010 09:39:53 PM 183 Views
Re: That's silly though - 05/03/2010 11:11:50 PM 190 Views
Re: That's silly though - 06/03/2010 12:11:06 AM 174 Views
Re: That's silly though - 06/03/2010 04:30:20 AM 168 Views
The answer is not "I don't know" it's - 07/03/2010 08:50:50 AM 166 Views
what does the chance of reoffending have to do with guilt? - 05/03/2010 10:02:21 PM 163 Views
Debt can be paid off, leaving the question of rehabilitation. *NM* - 05/03/2010 10:32:38 PM 67 Views
I still don't see the realtionship to guilt - 05/03/2010 10:59:28 PM 156 Views
Re: I still don't see the realtionship to guilt - 05/03/2010 11:31:51 PM 170 Views
there is a reason they call it the justice system and not the rehabilation system - 05/03/2010 11:33:55 PM 187 Views
It's called all kinds of things - 06/03/2010 12:02:00 AM 185 Views
Re: It's called all kinds of things - 06/03/2010 05:44:32 AM 175 Views
Well, we aren't going to agree at all (and I DID say it was opinion) - 07/03/2010 09:00:37 AM 148 Views
there is no perfect system - 05/03/2010 04:58:16 PM 181 Views
Reason Article inside - 05/03/2010 10:34:40 PM 212 Views

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