Legal Law

Florida Justice System

Sign my petition for Jennifer

Jennifer Mee gained notoriety at the age of fifteen after suffering from an incurable case of hiccups. She was nineteen years old and was convicted of first degree murder after participating in a fatal robbery.

Under Florida law, everyone who participated in a fatal robbery is equally guilty of murder, regardless of their role in the crime.

My point is that if the law says that about robberies, then why aren’t drunk drivers who kill someone charged with first degree murder because they have also killed someone in the process of committing a crime? That’s driving under the influence.

Florida legislators should explain to their people how their community will benefit from locking people up and scrapping the key approach.

In Jennifer Mee’s case, she was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, so what horrible crime did she commit?

Did he murder someone in cold blood?

Well, here are some facts as I understand them;

Jennifer arranged a date with a young man through Facebook, but she did not have in mind a romance but a robbery.

The plan was to rob the young man with the help of his two male companions, but during the robbery one of Jennifer’s friends shot the victim. I don’t know where Jennifer was when all this happened.

It was never Jennifer’s intention for the victim to be shot (according to Jennifer) and she claims she didn’t even know one of her friends had a firearm in her presence.

I don’t know what you think of Jennifer, but whatever she is, would you feel the same if she was one of your relatives?

My opinion is that Florida has changed the meaning of the word murder for whatever reason. I always thought that murder was an intentional act and that Jennifer’s only intention was to steal from her victim.

As far as I know, the murder wasn’t even discussed.

The other important point is life imprisonment without parole sentences.

This may be the only option for some, but not for most.

In Jennifer’s case, her attorney gave her a 3-5% chance of being released, but I can’t understand how she came to that conclusion.

Because there is a clemency option for Jennifer subject to certain criteria and one of them is that at least ten years must have passed since its adjudication. She’s been in it since she was 19 and now she’s 28, so she has little time left before her tenth birthday.

I have written to several American politicians about all this, but none have responded. GO FIGURE!

You can watch Jennifer Mee on YouTube and make your own decision. There are some cruel comments posted, but people like that have absolutely no empathy for other human beings.

They get a perverse sense of pleasure from making fun of other people’s mistakes.

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