From Newsgroup: rec.arts.tv
On Fri, 5 Dec 2025 17:55:23 -0500, Rhino <
no_offline_contact@example.com> wrote:
On 2025-12-05 4:41 p.m., BTR1701 wrote:
The moment a judge in the Netherlands handed the convicted illegal migrant >> killer of a little girl just 120 hours of community service as punishment. >>
The enraged father of the girl throws a chair at the judge. What do you
suppose is the over/under on his sentence for throwing the chair being harsher
than the murderer of his daughter?
https://video.twimg.com/amplify_video/1996830754060349440/vid/avc1/646x580/Mio1A8bXh1ITeZkt.mp4?tag=21
Betcha the father gets several years in the slammer for "contempt of >court"....
The judge will be elevated to the Supreme Court due to her empathy for
the murderer. The murderer won't even have to serve the full 120 hours.
Happened back in 2013. A polish driver going at least 75mph went off the
road and ran over the grandparents and little girl killing them all. Could have been vehicular manslaughter in the US.
The 2013 Car Accident Case
Incident: In May 2013, a Polish driver was involved in a car crash in Meijel, Netherlands, that tragically killed a two-year-old girl (named
Myrthe, although the name "Lisa" is sometimes used in recent, unrelated discussions online) and her two grandparents, who were cycling.
Court Ruling: The Dutch court found the driver violated Article 5 of the Road and Traffic Law, which pertains to causing a road hazard, but
determined there wasn't sufficient evidence of criminal "guilt" (meaning reckless or deliberately dangerous driving) to warrant a severe prison sentence. The court considered the deaths to be an "unfortunate" consequence
of the driver's behavior rather than an intentional or grossly negligent
act.
Sentence: The driver was sentenced to 120 hours of community service, a one-year license suspension, and two years of probation.
Public Reaction: This lenient sentence sparked widespread public
outrage, and the victim's father threw a chair at the judge in the courtroom out of grief and frustration. The Dutch court later issued a statement explaining its reasoning based on the specifics of Dutch law and the lack of proof of intentional fault
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