It's hard to believe that there are such stupid people, but all right. However, it's shocking that you only get 18 months in jail for attempted murder, while people in the past got over 5 years in jail for trivial crimes like copyright infringement.
> It's hard to believe that there are such stupid people, but all right
I assume that if someone is at the point where they're willing to murder someone else, they're in an emotional place that excludes rational thought. In cases like this, it may not be that these people are stupid as much as they are blinded by anger/pain/whatever.
> However, it's shocking that you only get 18 months in jail for attempted murder, while people in the past got over 5 years in jail for trivial crimes like copyright infringement
There are crimes, and there are crimes. Hypothetical profits are more valuable than human life.
In Brazil, the police isn't allowed to do this. The justice system accepts that the perpetrator would not follow the course of action if the government haven't created a hitman site.
This approach by the fbi can lead to some bizarre situations. They shouldn't have that power.
entrapment would be more like tempting someone into doing crime, this honeypot is more a public safety service as it targets already would be murderers
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[ 0.77 ms ] story [ 29.6 ms ] thread2023: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35582310 ("Man arrested after applying to be an assassin at RentAHitman.com, FBI says", 1 comment)
2021: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29391593 ("A Michigan woman tried to hire an assassin online at RentAHitman.com", 5 comments)
I assume that if someone is at the point where they're willing to murder someone else, they're in an emotional place that excludes rational thought. In cases like this, it may not be that these people are stupid as much as they are blinded by anger/pain/whatever.
There are crimes, and there are crimes. Hypothetical profits are more valuable than human life.
This approach by the fbi can lead to some bizarre situations. They shouldn't have that power.
"Look, a terrorrist. We trained it and we supplied it, but he is still a terrorist". Sincerely, the FBI
There are definitely incidents where law enforcement led people into committing crimes they wouldn’t otherwise have, and this ain’t one of those.