Sunday, January 18, 2004
 
Where There's No Law but a Prosecutor's Will, There's a Way

When a "sexual predator" escaped a Missouri Sexually Violent Predator Unit, he didn't break a law. According to a story in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
    It's a crime in Missouri to escape from a jail or prison, and it's a crime to escape from a mental health facility if the escapee was sent there in a criminal process, such as found not guilty but insane.
But the state of Missouri, in its hurry to follow other states' lead into indefinitely extending the finished sentences of certain classes of offenders, managed to create a means of continued incarceration for violent sexual predators, but didn't make leaving those means of continued, un-sentenced incarceration periods against the law.

Never fear, though. Prosecutors have a myriad of laws available for any occasion.

In fact, the interview is somewhat limited that he could give the Post-Dispatch because:
    He said talking about that now could hurt his chances with his current criminal case, a charge of felony property damage for cutting the fence.
What? He must not have dropped the portion of the fence he cut away in his escape or else he would also face a charge of felony littering.

Meanwhile, after releasing himself from indefinite incarceration and a probable unsentenced life term, this guy goes to Florida, gets married, and apparently doesn't commit another sex crime, or any crime for that matter:
    Neither Florida authorities nor investigators here have been able to link Ingrassia to any new sex crimes.
Instead, he's gone south, gotten a job, and gotten married. Granted, it was his wife who got suspicious of his past and led to his return to Missouri. Hey, I'm not some multiple-degreed, highly-paid state consultant, but that sounds almost reformed to me.

But he's cheesed off some officials who feel that their power derives from the respect they feel should be paid to them, so they're going to get him. Instead of a warehouse for undesirables, they'll throw him back in prison, and when his sentence for vandalism is over, they'll return him to his indefinite warehouse.

Don't worry, citizen. It hasn't happened to you. Yet.

 
To say Noggle, one first must be able to say the "Nah."