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Wednesday, November 07, 2007

The California Fires

So it would appear a 10 year old child is responsible for the massive fires in California that shattered the lives of so many young and old alike. A 10 year old child who, with a single match, allegedly caused the devastation of some 800+ square miles and the destruction of 2,100 homes. Can there be forgiveness? What punishment, if any, would befitting for a naive 10-year old who was merely fascinated with the cause and effect of a burning match? Presuming he was indeed naive, and not malicious enough to understand the magnitude that his actions might cause.

I am torn. I am torn because at the same time I feel someone should be held accountable for California's destruction, I can't imagine that a 10-year old could begin to fathom what devastation his actions would cause. That alone makes him innocent in my eyes.

How is that possible you ask?How can I not see that he should be punished for the destruction and devastation, let alone pain and suffering, so many endure as every day they feebly attempt to sift through the remnants of their tattered lives; constantly reminded of all they have lost. Longing to close their eyes so that when they once again open them the ashes of a life no longer lived ceases to exist; longing to inhale clean air, rather than air that is stained with the heaviness of smoke filled with lost lives and dreams......

It is possible because I remember a time when I was 6; so young and full of awe of my two older brothers who were gods in my eyes. Boys who were amazing and never wrong. And I remember myself and those boys going out into the woods behind our apartments, exploring, and lighting matches just to watch them burn. And I remember burning leaves and pine. And the flames flickering out of control. I remember trying to step on the fire to put it out. And it raging out of control and spreading so fast that all we could do was run to get away from it.

I don't remember the fire trucks; but I know they were there. I know we burned the woods down and the area was more than an acre in circumference. We were never found out. Even today. 30 years later. I called my mom to ask if she ever knew. She remembered the fire. She was shocked to hear it was us. I don't feel guilty. I don't feel guilty because we were young and naive and never had any intention of hurting anyone or anything. We were simply fascinated by the flames......

And that is why I can't blame a 1o year old for being anything other than careless. I can't imagine he intended for his antics to have the affect that it did-to cause the pain that it did. And I am willing to be he would take it all back if he could.


Here is the story as published by Times, Inc:

"A Child Be Charged in the Fires?
By MICHAEL LINDENBERGERWed Nov 7, 2:35 PM ET
The 10-year-old boy who accidentally started one of the worst California wildfires last month could face stern consequences, should prosecutors decide to bring charges. Though too young to be charged as an adult, the boy could still face millions of dollars in fines, removal from his home and possible detention as a ward of the state. For now the boy's fate - and that of his parents, who would be partially liable for any restitution payments he would have to pay - rests with Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley. His office told TIME he has not yet decided how to proceed. "The matter is under review," spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons told TIME on Monday. "No decision has been made."
To bring those charges, all Cooley must decide is whether the boy knew right from wrong - an easy standard to meet, other prosecutors in the state say. "That is a lot easier to establish than you would think," said Cyndi Jo Means, a deputy district attorney in nearby San Diego County who leads that county's juvenile division arson team. "Think of your own children, even very small children; most of the time they know when they did something wrong."
Despite the low hurdle to prosecution, Means contends the California juvenile justice system seeks to help young suspects, who can benefit from counseling and close supervision from the court and case workers. Children under 14 are nearly always charged as juveniles, not adults - no matter what the crime. "We try to help the child, and prosecuting them as adults would not be very helpful," Means said. Any finding of guilt, she added, would not follow the boy into adulthood.
Southern Californians are still sorting through the wreckage from the fires, which burned more than 800 square miles - an area 40 times as large as Manhattan - and destroyed some 2,100 homes. The 10-year-old's carelessness sparked the Buckweed fire in Los Angeles County, which destroyed 21 homes and injured at least three people. Those losses have left some residents in a less than forgiving mood. "If you accidentally set a massive fire that destroys homes, causes residents to flee for their lives and requires millions of dollars in resources to extinguish, then you damn well need to pay the piper," wrote Dave Bossert on his online newspaper, The West Ranch Beacon.
Peter Arenella, a professor at the UCLA Law School said any prosecution of a 10-year-old that aims to punish the boy, rather than help him, "is an absurdity. The only justification for that would be if, in some extreme case, there was a need to protect society from him." Barring that, he said, prosecutors should be reluctant to sweep the boy up into the legal system.
It's hard to see how stern consequences - taking the boy from his parents, for instance, and handing down a multi-million fine - would be helpful to the 10-year-old. Much of the decision of whether to prosecute him rests with Cooley, who like prosecutors everywhere has a great deal of discretion. Unless uglier details about the boy's behavior are discovered, he could decide that in this case playing with matches doesn't rise the level of arson - even if the boy admits he knew that doing so was wrong. As Means points out, children almost always admit they knew their actions were wrong when they are questioned by police or prosecutors, which can be a scary experience for a kid.
When the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the death penalty for inmates who were under 18 when they committed their crimes, it argued that teenagers' brains are not fully formed until they are grown, and that punishing them as adults was therefore cruel and unusual. No one is saying a 10-year-old boy ought to be executed for setting a fire, but even the lesser punishment the boy is facing could be nearly as cruel. That has led some to argue that the bar for prosecution ought to be higher than simply proving that he knew right from wrong. Boys know lots of things are wrong - from ignoring bedtimes to eating too many cookies. A better standard, some argue, would be determining whether the boy, at 10, had any way of knowing the consequences of what he was doing with those matches".

With reporting by Jill Underwood/San Diego View this article on Time.com
Copyright © 2007Time Inc

Monday, November 05, 2007

Well, ya might want to set your coffee cup down before you view this one or else you are liable to be wearing your coffee or worse, spitting it out of your nose.

I can honestly say that thankfully, I have never had the need for the rather ingenious invention of "wedgie proof" undies, however several people I once knew could have benefited highly by having a pair or two.

http://cosmos.bcst.yahoo.com/ver/247.1/popup/index.php?cl=4876031