Posey murders his family

MrGxr

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Sorry, but this just hit me wrong...
This is because I can't understand any of this...
Cody Posey claims to be abused, yet kills the only witness that can testify to his claims (Step-Sister) along with Father and Step-Mother. His Brother testifies that its all a lie, but wasn't there to say for sure.

What kind of message is this sending out there. Convicted of the 3 murders and 4 counts of evidence tampering. My opinion is he thought this out and then carried it out.

Gets up in front of the Judge and says he can better himself... the Judge (who in the past has been swayed by media and public opinion) once again has swayed to the media and public opinion and has given this kid another chance. Murderer at 14, held by Children, Youth, and Families Department until 21 yrs old, then released into the public again....

Sorry for ranting here, but what the heck is this world coming to when you can murder your family and then fall back on a system that says because you are a certain age you will be considered a child...

Sorry if you plan and commit murder, you are no longer a child.

Here's the article from local paper if you are interested. Long read...

Thanks for listening.

Posey To Be Held Until Age 21

By Rene Romo
Journal Southern Bureau
ALAMOGORDO— Cody Posey got his second chance Thursday— a juvenile sentence that was met with jubilation by supporters and grief by some relatives of the three family members the 16-year-old was convicted of killing.
Senior prosecutor Sandra Grisham had called Posey, 14 when he killed his father, stepmother and 13-year-old stepsister on the Hondo Valley ranch of ABC newsman Sam Donaldson on July 5, 2004, a "mass murderer," a "cold-blooded killer" with psychopathic traits who could not be saved.
Grisham sought a maximum adult sentence of 60 years for the three killings and four counts of evidence tampering.
But in handing down the sentence, Children's Court Judge James Counts said he had no discretion to impose an adult sentence, because prosecutors had failed to prove Posey was not amenable to rehabilitation.
Counts ordered Posey— who had asked the judge Wednesday to give him a chance to "better myself" with psychiatric treatment in a juvenile setting— held by the Children, Youth and Families Department until the age of 21. Counts recommended the boy receive therapy at the state-run Sequoyah Adolescent Treatment Center in Albuquerque.
The sentence drew applause from one side of the packed courtroom and, outside, whoops and honking car horns.
As Lincoln County sheriff's deputies led Posey away from the Otero County courthouse where sign-carrying supporters had held vigil throughout the three-day-long sentencing hearing, the smiling boy said: "Thank you to everybody."
Defense attorney Gary Mitchell said Posey told him after sentencing: "Don't worry, Mr. Mitchell, I'm not going to disappoint anybody."
"All we ever wanted was for him (Posey) to remain in the children's system and get help," Mitchell said. "Now he gets that help."
Mitchell said he could not recall another case in New Mexico in which a judge gave a juvenile convicted of first-degree murder a juvenile, rather than adult, sentence.
First Judicial District Attorney Henry Valdez, in a telephone interview from his Santa Fe office, said, "I don't think there's been a comparable case in my memory, not an individual like that with multiple victims."

Very close
Posey was three months and 14 days short of turning 15 at the time of the killings. Had he been 15, the judge would have been required by state law to impose an adult sentence for the first-degree murder conviction.
"This was very unusual," said Alamogordo attorney Regina Ryanczak, a former state District Court judge in Las Cruces in the late '90s. "I think Counts did a very brave thing."
Posey garnered international sympathy after he and other witnesses provided graphic testimony, broadcast on Court TV, that the boy had endured years of escalating emotional and physical abuse, primarily at the hands of his father.
Testimony included descriptions of the boy being verbally demeaned, punched, whipped, slapped, hit with rocks and hay bales, and menaced with hay hooks. Posey testified that the night before the murders, his father had used a heated welding rod to try to force him to have sex with his stepmother.
A jury convicted Posey on Feb. 7 of first- and second-degree murder and voluntary manslaughter, respectively, for the shooting deaths of his stepsister, Marilea Schmid; 44-year-old stepmother, Tryone Posey; and 34-year-old father, Delbert Paul Posey. But at least seven of the jurors wrote Counts seeking leniency for Cody Posey.
After the judge announced the sentence, Roswell resident Corliss Clees, the boy's aunt and legal guardian, said her phone "never stopped ringing— people from Canada, from Mexico, from Switzerland, from Holland, saying they wanted the best for Cody, they wanted to help him."
Delbert Posey's brother, Verlin Posey, who maintained the stories of abuse were lies, said he was "heartbroke that the judge could discount the lives of my brother's family, especially that little girl."
Verlin Posey called the sentence a "gross miscarriage of justice."
"This is not over for Cody," said Shanda Posey, Verlin's wife. "Cody's going to have to live with this for the rest of his life. If he seen anything at all in Marilea's face the day that he killed her ... he deserves to replay that image every night, and I hope he does."

Letter of the law
Cody Posey testified that, after a final argument with his father outside their home, he went inside and first shot his stepmother as she lay on a living room couch. When his father rushed in, followed by his stepsister, the boy, hidden behind a refrigerator, shot them each in the head.
Tom Sullivan, the Lincoln County sheriff when the killings occurred, said Thursday the sentence "sends a message to the children of Lincoln County— that you can murder your parents, you can shoot your sister in the eye if she tattles on you. No matter how serious the crime, as long as you are a juvenile, you'll never have to go to prison."
But, in announcing the sentence, Counts said the juvenile sentence "is not a finding that the killings were justified. The jury verdict does not support the idea that the killings were justified."
Counts went on: "If the Legislature wants adult sentences for every 14-year-old convicted of first-degree murder, they can change the law. But as the Children's Code is now written, it starts out with the assumption that children who commit crimes, even very serious crimes, should be treated differently than adults who commit those crimes."
Posey's supporters said the judge's decision means that the boy, with no prior record with the juvenile justice system, will finally get the help he needs after enduring an abusive home and a tumultuous life that included seeing his mother die after a traffic accident when he was 10.
"He's a good kid. They pushed him too far," said Jacob Schmid, Marilea Schmid's biological father. He added, "What we wanted for Cody was a chance, a chance to grow up, to be someone. Judge Counts gave him that chance."
Counts said the "weight of the evidence" led him to conclude that Posey suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, both treatable conditions, at the time of the killings.
"Additionally, there is evidence that the situational nature of the violence makes it less likely the respondent would pose a future danger to the public," Counts said.
Twelfth Judicial District prosecutors Grisham and Janice Schryer declined to comment on the sentence, and District Attorney Scot Key was in a trial in Carrizozo.
Posey will be sent first to the Youth Diagnostic and Development Center in Albuquerque before going to Sequoyah in 30 to 60 days, said defense attorney Vera Ockenfels.
 
Here's another article talking about immature brains and crimes...

Friday, February 24, 2006

Immature Brains May Cloud Teens

By Leann Holt
Journal Staff Writer
New research about how teenage brains work— or don't work— is raising questions about when young criminals should be tried or sentenced as adults.
Teen brains are so underdeveloped, some experts say, that juveniles should be put in the same category as mentally ill or developmentally delayed people when it comes to punishment. Rehabilitation, they say, is more appropriate than long sentences in adult prisons.
Rehabilitation is the course Judge James Counts took in sentencing teen killer Cody Posey as a juvenile Thursday. Counts said prosecutors had not proven Posey to be beyond rehabilitation.
Posey did not deny killing his father, stepmother and stepsister in 2004. But his attorney claimed the killings were triggered by years of abuse and that the 16-year-old could be rehabilitated in the children's system.
"Even normal kids do dumb things— drive too fast, take risks," said Mark Wellek, past president of the American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry. "They don't have a part of their brain that controls that.
"When (troubled) kids are under duress and impulses are rising, nothing will stop them. They just live on fear impulses."
Other experts, however, say that some children who commit heinous crimes are budding psychopaths and need to be kept away from society.
"Some offenses and some levels of anti-social behavior are so dangerous that they need to have an adult sentence," said Todd Heisey, assistant district attorney in Albuquerque. "We need a system that allows for those kids."
The difficulty seems to lie in knowing which kids are which.
Daniel Seagrave, an Albuquerque forensic psychologist, said even normal teens can display psychopathic-like behavior: inability to empathize, lack of remorse, little impulse control.
"It's hard to predict future behavior because kids are in flux, with little consistency in behavior or emotions," said Seagrave, who has authored studies about the assessment of juvenile offenders.
"That is not to say there are not dangerous kids. But we're not at the point that you can say, 'This kid's a psychopath' when it could be developmental."
Recent long-term studies of adolescent brains have led some experts to advocate for more lenient treatment of juveniles. The studies played a part in the U.S. Supreme Court decision last year to ban the death penalty for juveniles.
Magnetic resonance imaging of adolescent brains reveals that the areas that control impulsive behavior and govern high-level reasoning are not fully developed until the mid-20s. For children who have been abused or who have had serious brain injuries, the brain matures later— if at all, said Barry Feld, a law professor at the University of Minnesota.
"The adolescent brain is simply not as capable of impulse control or logical thought of long-term consequences as the adult brain," Feld said. "The whole idea of the juvenile court is based on the notion that kids are immature and suffer from impaired judgment."
Under New Mexico law, juveniles age 15 and older convicted of first-degree murder must be sentenced as adults.
Children 14 and older can be tried as adults if they have been charged with any of 13 serious crimes, including first-degree or second-degree murder, arson or assault with a weapon.
In 2004, 88 juveniles were tried as adults in New Mexico, but only seven were sentenced to adult prisons, said Tom Swisstack, director of the Bernalillo County Juvenile Detention Facility.
"Most judges are seeing our children can be saved by putting them in the juvenile justice system," Swisstack said.
Bob Schwartz, former Bernalillo County district attorney, said a problem the state faces is that, when teens turn 21, they are automatically released even if they are displaying signs that they could be a danger to society.
Schwartz said the state needs a mechanism that would allow it to transfer unrehabilitated teens to the adult system.
Kathleen Heide, author of "Why Kids Kill Parents," said children who commit the most unthinkable crime— murder— are often the most amenable to treatment, provided their acts were provoked by "desperate situations" and not mental illness.
"The reality is you can reclaim these children who have killed under extreme circumstances if they have meaningful, intensive treatment," said Heide, a professor of criminology at the University of South Florida.
Facts about people who kill their parents

250 people a year kill their parents

50 of those are under 18

85 percent are boys

2 percent kill more than one parent or family member

About one of four killings involve the father; one in six involve the mother

The majority of victims and offenders are white

42 percent of slayers used firearms; 27 percent used knives
Source: Kathleen Heide, author, "Why Kids Kill Parents"
 
i have a problem with the whole minor thing. if commit a crime like that and are convicted why should you get another chance? age adds wisdom this is true but when you are of legal adult age i don't think it should be stricken from the record and you get a new life
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if you didnt have the concept of right and wrong at 12 14 16 your not going to have it 21
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