The verdict in this Arkansas news reporter case infuriated me

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http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/11/12/arkansas.anchor.slain/index.html

A jury sentenced an Arkansas man to life in prison without parole for killing a television anchor, officials said Thursday. The Pulaski County, Arkansas, jury on Wednesday convicted Curtis Lavelle Vance, 29, of capital murder, residential burglary, rape and theft of property in the October 2008 slaying of Anne Pressly, 26.
Pressly, the morning news anchor for CNN affiliate KATV, was found beaten and unconscious in her home. She died five days later.
Vance's sentencing phase began after he was convicted Wednesday of capital murder, rape and burglary.
Jurors were tasked with deciding whether the aggravating circumstances in favor of the death penalty outweighed the mitigating circumstances.
"Tonight, they have come back with a sentence, a sentence that they believe, and we share with them, is the harshest possible sentence for this gentleman going forward, where he will now spend the rest of his natural life in a 6-by-9 cell with nothing to think about but what he has done," said Guy Cannady, stepfather of the victim.
"It's not until he's carried out of Tucker Max in a pine box will he really meet his true judgment," Cannady added, referring to Arkansas' Tucker Maximum Security Prison.
He said he was not disappointed that Vance did not receive the death penalty.
Prosecutor Larry Jegley said the jury gave Vance "everything they could give him except the death penalty."
Asked if there were too many mitigating circumstances, Jegley said, "I don't know. I can't speak for the jury. Cases like this, all you can do is put 'em in front of 12 good people and ask them to follow the evidence and do what their conscience demands."
Attempts by CNN to reach members of Vance's defense team were unsuccessful Wednesday and Thursday.
"There really aren't any winners tonight," Cannady said. "Nothing that's been done here will ever bring Anne back. We'll never see her smile, we'll never hear her laugh, we'll never know the joy of her presence with us until we see her again in heaven."
Among the defense witnesses presented Thursday was Vance's mother, Jacqueline Vance Burnett, CNN affiliate KARK reported. Burnett cried on the stand as she spoke about her battle with crack addiction and admitted abusing her son when he was a child, including an incident when he was 7 years old and she slammed his head into a brick wall, the station said.
A doctor testified earlier Thursday that Vance had told him school was easy for him before that incident, but difficult afterward. Both doctors said they believe Vance has frontal lobe damage to his brain as well as cognitive impairment, according to KARK.
Vance was linked to the killing through DNA, however, and police said at the time of his arrest last year they were "110 percent" sure he was guilty.
He had given several statements to police, including one saying he was at Pressly's home and another admitting to her murder. Defense attorney Steve Morley told CNN affiliate WREG as Vance's trial began earlier this month that such evidence presented an obstacle for the defense, but said he hoped jurors could be persuaded to spare his client's life.
KARK reported that jurors heard recordings in which Vance apparently confessed to beating Pressly with a piece of wood.
Pressly's mother, Patti Cannady, told NBC last year her daughter fought hard for her life, breaking her left hand in the process.
"I found my daughter beyond recognition, with every bone in her face broken, her nose broken, her jaw pulverized so badly that the bone had come out of it," Cannady said. "I actually thought that her throat had possibly been cut. Her entire skull had numerous fractures from which she suffered a massive stroke."
DNA evidence has also tied Vance to a rape in April 2008 in Marianna, Arkansas, about 90 miles east of Little Rock, police said in December.




I have no faith anymore in our judicial system. Sometimes, I think our barbaric ways in earlier times was more justified than the piece of garbage system we have instituted today.
 

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What upsets you about the way this case was handled?
 

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he mutilated and raped her, openly admitted to the crime, and he still gets a life sentence? DNA and hair evidence to boot.

If you were an Arkansas resident, would you want to fund this savage for the next 60 years?
 

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he mutilated and raped her, openly admitted to the crime, and he still gets a life sentence? DNA and hair evidence to boot.

If you were an Arkansas resident, would you want to fund this savage for the next 60 years?
Dying would be a small price to pay. Living is going to be very tough.
 

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That was one awful murder, though. I remember when it happened. Just brutal beyond belief.
 

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he will rot in prison, i don't mind my tax dollars paying for that. i would rather see him get the death penalty, but with the way the system is, had he been given the death penalty we would be keeping him alive for the next ten years, where he would be given the good drugs to keep him numb and complacent. at least being in the general population, he has a much greater chance of meeting a more violent, untimely death, much as he subjected that young woman to.
 

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he will rot in prison, i don't mind my tax dollars paying for that. i would rather see him get the death penalty, but with the way the system is, had he been given the death penalty we would be keeping him alive for the next ten years, where he would be given the good drugs to keep him numb and complacent. at least being in the general population, he has a much greater chance of meeting a more violent, untimely death, much as he subjected that young woman to.


I think thats blown out of proportion. People don't get killed in prison.. County jail is a bit rougher while people are awaiting sentencing. When people get to where they're going they wanna do their time and move on. If they're in a decent jail :laugh: they're not gonna try and fuck it up.

Kill the bastard and save the dough. Keeping people locked up costs people a fortune.
 

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The jurors will have to live with their decesion for the rest of their life. I would of probably voted to fry him.
 

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The family said justice was deserved, and didn't seem to have a problem with him rotting in prison. I don't know if this is genuine though because they don't want to appear barbaric to the nation.

This man has raped several women in the past, and they all testified in this trial. They all said the same thing, if they wouldn't show their faces, he didn't kill them. I think this reporter valued life so much and struggled really hard to defend herself from this savage that it led to this grisly demise.

Even the killer felt he deserved the death penalty, which makes me wonder if the jury wanted him to suffer mentally. I don't think he has a conscience though, and he just put on a show for them.
 

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I think thats blown out of proportion. People don't get killed in prison.. County jail is a bit rougher while people are awaiting sentencing. When people get to where they're going they wanna do their time and move on. If they're in a decent jail :laugh: they're not gonna try and fuck it up.

Kill the bastard and save the dough. Keeping people locked up costs people a fortune.

true to a point, but life in prison...........I would rather have a bullet in the head then life
 

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I'm a proponent of truth in sentencing, I'm not a proponent of the death penalty. If life in prison without parole means life in prison without parole, I'm Ok with that. He knows he'll never have freedom again, let him rot.

As for the money, it costs more to execute somebody. All the legal costs incurred fighting endless appeals. And it takes a long time too, at least in most states it does.
 

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It's tough. I can't imagine having to go through something like this with my kids. I'd probably kill the guy myself but what would that really accomplish?

I believe the prosecutors should ask the victims family what kind of sentence they would be satisfied with and go with that if possible.

Of course there are always exceptions but I like the idea of the family having input.
 

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