HayesAJones wrote:
Are.. are you a Triceratops?
HayesAJones wrote:
Are.. are you a Triceratops?
Anders Behring Breivik should be locked up in a mental institution for last summer's massacre that left 77 dead in Norway, prosecutors argued during closing remarks in Oslo today, the AFP reports.
Prosecutors told the five Oslo judges hearing the case that they could not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Breivik is sane.
During the 10-week trial, Breivik said that the attack, which left mostly children dead, was "preventative" to defend "ethnic Norwegians" and that he would not hesitate to do it again. Under Norwegian law, Breivik faced a maximum of 21 years in jail, which could be extended to life if he is considered a threat to society. If found insane he could be sentenced to a psychiatric facility for life.
According to a Norwegian poll, the AFP reports, three out of four Norwegians want Breivik to go to prison rather than an insane asylum. During the trial, Breivik explained to a packed courtroom how he used Call of Duty to "train" for the shooting spree.
Tomorrow, Breivik's attorneys will summarize the case and Breivik will have up to an hour to address the court.
The judges are expected to rule by next month, determining whether Breivik can be held criminally responsible for the killing spree he confessed to, or whether he will be committed to a psychiatric hospital.

Bellefonte, Pennsylvania (CNN) -- Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky was found guilty Friday on 45 of 48 counts related to sexual abuse of boys over a 15-year period.
Jurors delivered the verdict around 10 p.m. after deliberating for about 21 hours. There were convictions related to all 10 sexual abuse victims, with the three not-guilty verdicts applying to three different individuals.
Sandusky stood slightly hunched, looking down with his hand in his pocket but showing no visible emotion as the guilty verdicts were read out in court. His wife, Dottie, blinked back tears.
Judge John Cleland revoked Sandusky's bail and ordered his arrest. Video showed him leaving the courthouse in handcuffs and heading into an awaiting police car destined for the Centre County jail. He didn't say anything as reporters asked "if he had anything to say to the victims."
"We knew whatever the jury's verdict was we would honor it," said Karl Rominger, one of the defense lawyers. "Jerry rose. I saw tears in his eyes."
Back inside the courtroom, the young man identified as court documents as Victim 6 was in tears as he hugged prosecutors.
Sandusky should be sentenced in about 90 days, the judge said.
Watch Sandusky be lead out of court
His case gripped the nation and led to the dismissal of a legendary coach and one of America's highest-paid university presidents, while his trial included gripping and at times graphic testimony from his victims.
Reporter describes Sandusky's reaction
Final defense witness is not Sandusky
Sandusky witness on showers
During closing arguments, prosecutors described the ex-Nittany Lions defensive coordinator as a pedophile who preyed on victims using a charity he founded for troubled children, repeatedly abusing young boys in his care.
His defense sought to poke holes in the prosecution's case throughout the trial, such as pointing to inconsistencies in the testimony of Mike McQueary, a former graduate assistant who testified that he witnessed Sandusky apparently sodomizing a boy in a university shower.
Defense attorney Joe Amendola reminded jurors of the lack of physical evidence in the case, accusing the alleged victims of conspiring for financial gain, while also blaming the media for what he described as biased coverage.
iReport: Share your reaction
Lead prosecutor Joseph McGettigan rebuffed those arguments, telling jurors that "the commonwealth has overwhelming evidence against Mr. Sandusky."
In a bombshell announcement Thursday evening, Matt Sandusky -- one of Jerry Sandusky's six adopted children -- said through his attorney that he was sexually abused by the former Penn State assistant football coach, adding that he had been prepared to testify against him.
Legal analysts say the accusation could bring additional charges, including incest charges, against the former coach.
The broader scandal led to the November firing of iconic head football coach Joe Paterno, the dismissal of university president Graham Spanier and brought charges against vice president Gary Schultz and former Athletic Director Tim Curley for perjury and failing to report the abuse.
During grand jury testimony, Paterno said that he was told by a graduate assistant that Sandusky was in the showers "fondling or doing something of a sexual nature to a young boy."
The Nittany Lions' head coach, who died on January 22 after a career that had him widely credited with bringing the program to national prominence, reported the incident to his superiors but did not inform police, the school's board of trustees said in a report that explained Paterno's firing.
"We determined that his decision to do his minimum legal duty and not to do more to follow up constituted a failure of leadership by Coach Paterno," the trustees said.
That decision prompted rioting from Penn State university students, overturning a news van and clashing with police, who used tear gas break up the crowds.
After a week of testimony, during which time witnesses graphically described sexual encounters with Sandusky that they said occurred durijng their boyhoods, jurors made their decision without ever having heard from Sandusky on the witness stand.
If the former coach had testified, prosecutors could have potentially submitted as new evidence a November television interview he had with NBC sportscaster Bob Costas.
What Sandusky has said about child rape allegations
In a portion of the interview that was not part of the original broadcast, Sandusky told Costas that he "didn't go around seeking out every young person for sexual needs that I've helped."
On Tuesday, the prosecution called its only rebuttal witness to counter testimony that raised questions about the former coach's mental health.
Dr. Elliot Atkins earlier had testified that he diagnosed Sandusky with histrionic personality disorder, part of a class of conditions called dramatic personality disorders, which are marked by unstable emotions and distorted self-images. But a second psychologist, prosecution witness Dr. John O'Brien, disputed those findings, saying that the "personality profile Mr. Sandusky exhibited was within normal limits."
A day later, the defense called Dr. Jonathan Dranov, an acquaintance of McQueary's, who said the former graduate assistant told him he heard "sexual sounds" and saw the boy in the shower when an arm reached around him. Sandusky then emerged from the shower area, he quoted McQueary as saying. But McQueary said he did not actually witness a sexual encounter, Dranov said of their conversation.
That account differs from what the former graduate assistant testified he saw.
McQueary said he witnessed Sandusky pressed up against the boy in the shower and that it seemed obvious the former coach had been sodomizing the child.
On Tuesday, Sandusky's wife told jurors that she could remember at least six of her husband's accusers staying overnight at their house, but that she never witnessed sexual abuse.
All you need to know about allegations, how case unraveled
Eight young men testified, often in disturbingly graphic detail, of how Sandusky forced them to engage in sexual acts in various places, including showers in the Penn State coaches' locker room, hotel rooms and the basement of his home.
One told jurors that Sandusky -- whom he met, like many of the accusers, through The Second Mile foundation that the ex-coach founded -- had threatened him if he told others about the abuse. Another said Sandusky warned him that he might send him home from a trip to Texas, where they'd gone to watch a Penn State bowl game.
The defense challenged the accusers' timetable, questioned the various allegations and called multiple character witness to defend Sandusky's stellar reputation in the community.
yaburu wrote:I swear, one of these days, these trolls are going to pull a skreeonk Voltron and combine themselves into one mega-troll.

SuperSaiyan4Godzilla wrote:And Godzilla isn't Pixar. The latter deals with children. The former deals with adults who behave like children.
SuperSaiyan4Godzilla wrote:wataru wrote:It's not huge and it's white.
LIKE YO DICK!

kikomia wrote:Another species extinct: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/gallery ... n-pictures
Giratina93 wrote:^ Likes tigers and bears. ALOT.
Shadow wrote:Tyler wrote:One of my neighbors' dogs keeps shitting next to my car every morning.
Shit on the dog in it's sleep, that'll teach it.

kikomia wrote:Another species extinct: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/gallery ... n-pictures
yaburu wrote:I swear, one of these days, these trolls are going to pull a skreeonk Voltron and combine themselves into one mega-troll.


Gyaos wrote:http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/03/15/american-isps-to-launch-massive-copyright-spying-scheme-on-july-12/
Behold, the death of liberty.
Godzillatheultimate wrote:Lincoln is gonna emancipate your balls from your body.

Gyaos wrote:http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/03/15/american-isps-to-launch-massive-copyright-spying-scheme-on-july-12/
Behold, the death of liberty.

Legionmaster wrote:Gyaos wrote:http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/03/15/american-isps-to-launch-massive-copyright-spying-scheme-on-july-12/
Behold, the death of liberty.
I find it incredibly laughable that people bitch so hard when laws are actually enforced. If you don't want to suffer, don't break the law. Common sense, people.
yaburu wrote:I swear, one of these days, these trolls are going to pull a skreeonk Voltron and combine themselves into one mega-troll.



Gyaos wrote:http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/03/15/american-isps-to-launch-massive-copyright-spying-scheme-on-july-12/
Behold, the death of liberty.

SpanishBulldog63 wrote:UltramanGoji wrote:Now you know, and knowing is half the battle!
And the other half is fought with a shotgun!

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