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I actually find the sheriff there far more disturbing Joel Send a noteboard - 22/12/2010 06:49:33 AM
First of all, a sheriff deciding a book is so horrid he should have agents solicit a copy from out of state just to charge the author with violating a law that doesn't exist where he lives reeks of entrapment to me. Of course, a lot of undercover stings against pedophiles reek of entrapment to me; I think it's pretty sad that someone can be online typing away in a chatroom when someone pretending to be a 16 year old repeatedly throws themselves at them just to make a bust and "protect the children". Bekah mentioned bombs above; I can't imagine any other crime where cops can arrest someone for agreeing to commit a crime they solicited the person to commit. Ask someone to kill a child and it's a felony; ask them to have sex with one and it's a public service. The sheriff in this case appears to be part and parcel of that mentality:
Judd said he was incensed when he heard about the book and that no one had arrested Greaves for selling it....

"What's wrong with a society that has gotten to the point that we can't arrest child pornographers and child molesters who write a book about how to rape a child?" said Judd, who keeps a Bible on his desk and is known throughout Florida as a crusader against child predators....

Judd said his undercover detectives got Greaves to mail the book to them for $50; he told officers it was his last copy.

"If we can get jurisdiction ... we're coming after you," Judd said. "There's nothing in the world more important than our children."

If I had a nickel for every person who's done something I think should put them in jail I'd be a millionaire, but if I went out and solicited them to do things that are legal where they live and illegal where I live just so I could bust them I'd simply be unsuitable for law enforcement. Crusades aren't in that job description: Justice is, though that's too often neglected when it's eve acknowledged. But it's all OK as long as they can wrangle jurisdiction, even via entrapment, because "there's nothing in the world more important than our children". The most draconian measures are justified the moment children are involved. Just, y'know, don't tell Chinese toymakers that. ;)
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This should make for an interesting debate - 21/12/2010 02:19:39 PM 794 Views
Free speech. An easy way for me to tell is replace the topic with the word "murder" - 21/12/2010 02:33:17 PM 425 Views
I don't know. Isn't it illegal to write a how to for making a bomb? - 21/12/2010 02:51:34 PM 453 Views
Not in the US, not necessarily anyway - 21/12/2010 03:31:10 PM 430 Views
Incitement to racial hatred isn't illegal in the US, I believe... - 21/12/2010 04:02:58 PM 424 Views
Depends on what's in the book - 21/12/2010 03:01:53 PM 509 Views
I think they are on slippery slope but a fairly firm part up near the top - 21/12/2010 03:46:58 PM 463 Views
What about a textbook, detailing how to make explosives? - 21/12/2010 04:13:02 PM 514 Views
A how to guide for pedophiles? - 21/12/2010 08:25:20 PM 401 Views
Personally, I'd like to see him castrated, but - 22/12/2010 12:50:30 AM 426 Views
The guy is gross and disgusting of course, but what is in the book? - 22/12/2010 01:21:13 AM 441 Views
Um. I don't see the point of the book. - 22/12/2010 05:27:43 AM 408 Views
I actually find the sheriff there far more disturbing - 22/12/2010 06:49:33 AM 474 Views

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