Corolinth wrote:
If there is to be a criminal record that may be used in perpetuity as the basis to refuse employment or housing, then the convict has received a life sentence. Period.
A life sentence to people knowing they are a felon. This is not the customary use of "life sentence".
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Now, not all crimes are equally severe. Not all crimes merit a life sentence. The whole of human society throughout recorded history has functioned off of those two basic concepts.
Not all crimes merit a life
prison sentence. You are using the customary shortening of "life prison sentence" to "life sentence" to say that because not all crimes merit life in prison, that somehow means they don't merit a lifelong record. The two are not equivalent.
Furthermore, we are talking about felonies, not all crimes.
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If a crime does not merit a life sentence, we must prevent landlords and employers from accessing records of crimes for which the sentence has been served to completion. To do otherwise is to pass a life sentence, which legal precedent holds as excessive for the majority of criminal activity, and is therefore explicitly forbidden by the United States Constitution.
Except that it is not. A life prison sentence has been held to be excessive for most crimes. A lifetime record
Furthermore, trials are public in this record, which is also mandated by the Constitution. Therefore, their records must be also. To hold that allowing people to access those records somehow constitutes a sentence equivalent to a life prison sentence and therefore is forbidden requires violating another part of the Constitution.
The position that a "life sentence" to people being able to access your records is cruel and unusual punishment fails Constitutionally. The idea that it's the equivalent of a prison sentence fails the logic test and the laugh test.