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 @9FPBNFQLiberalfrom Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

This question is too simple. Maybe there are multiple degrees of 1st degree murder? A hearing after 15 years does not mean the murderer gets released. Would families of the victim(s) heal enough in 15 years to accept any court's decision? 20 years? life? Would it be a waste of money or are there programs for the victim's families to rehabilitate them?

 @9BP479Yfrom Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes depending on behavior and mental health development while in prison. If a prisoner does not meet expectations, move the hearing ahead by a determined and discussed date

 @959RYHYfrom Ontario  answered…3yrs3Y

Yes, and we should provide more rehabilitation programs for prisoners and psychological evaluation.

 @8ZR6F7Tfrom Ontario  answered…3yrs3Y

No. A life sentence is a life sentence. Rehabilitate the inmate during incarceration. Teach them a trade, a skill, and give plenty of therapy.

 @8Y2B3JDfrom Ontario  answered…3yrs3Y

It depends how young they were when they commited the crime and just who the person was

 @8VNGZ37from Ontario  answered…4yrs4Y

 @wackytabackyboifrom Ontario  answered…4yrs4Y

It depends on the circumstance(s) surrounding the murder (why they did committed it, how gruesome it was, etc.) and whether or not they are still a threat to society.

 @99NFMXFLiberalfrom Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

If the prisoner killed them in an act of self defense or say the victim was also a bad person

 @989QNY2from Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

we should provide more rehabilitation programs for prisoners provided a strict psychological evaluation shows they are no longer a threat to society

 @8SLY6Q2from Ontario  answered…4yrs4Y

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