https://aura.com/olurinatti : Stop leaving yourself vulnerable to data breaches. Go to my sponsor Aura to get a 14-day free trial and see if any of your data has been exposed
Olayemi Olurin tells the stories of Lakeith Smith, Tay K, and those who've been affected by the felony murder rule.
If you want to keep up with Lakeith Smith's case and support him follow his IG here:
https://www.instagram.com/justice4lakeithsmith/
Join the channel to support the show!
https://www.YouTube.com/@olurinatti/join
Follow Olay on all socials @msolurin
Twitter: https://twitter.com/msolurin
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/msolurin/
CashApp:
$oolurin11
Olay's Website:
https://www.olayemiolurin.com/
Subscribe to Olurintatti on Sub Stack:
https://olurinatti.substack.com/
Edited By: https://twitter.com/sherlock0ats
Thumbnail Illustration : skutchdraws.bsky.social
Chapters:
0:00 Felony Murder
5:57 Tay K
Olayemi Olurin tells the stories of Lakeith Smith, Tay K, and those who’ve been affected by the felony murder rule.
While I agree that felony murder in theory is just, I do take objection to trying a minor as an adult with it. The whole reason we have a separate justice system for minors is because they are too stupid, impressionable, and gullible to know what they are doing, and understand the potential consequences and outcomes of their actions. Couple that with the adolescent feelings of invulnerability, and trying them as adults is just wrong in most cases in my opinion.
Should this kid be punished? Absolutely yes. Should he live most, if not all, of his adult life in prison? No. Unequivocally no. This situation is exactly where and why we need better rehabilitation and education in the American justice system. The whole notion of him being in prison for 65 years is just absurd to begin with in my opinion - instead of wasting 65 years spending tax dollars feeding and housing him, let’s educate and rehabilitate and get him out to be a productive member of society. …whole situation is stupid
While I agree that felony murder in theory is just, I do take objection to trying a minor as an adult with it. The whole reason we have a separate justice system for minors is because they are too stupid, impressionable, and gullible to know what they are doing, and understand the potential consequences and outcomes of their actions. Couple that with the adolescent feelings of invulnerability, and trying them as adults is just wrong in most cases in my opinion.
Should this kid be punished? Absolutely yes. Should he live most, if not all, of his adult life in prison? No. Unequivocally no. This situation is exactly where and why we need better rehabilitation and education in the American justice system. The whole notion of him being in prison for 65 years is just absurd to begin with in my opinion - instead of wasting 65 years spending tax dollars feeding and housing him, let’s educate and rehabilitate and get him out to be a productive member of society. …whole situation is stupid