Father turns in son for killing 3 people.

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gibbsisgod
06-18-2007, 06:39 AM
Apparently Lancaster PA IS one badass place.

All kidding aside this is sad. The boy kills a whole family and then confesses to his father who promptly turned him in to police.


Teen charged in slaying of Pa. family - Crime & Punishment - MSNBC.com (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19268067/)


This is a tough one. Would you turn in one of your kids? I'm not sure I wouldn't try to help him in some way.

dmek25
06-18-2007, 06:46 AM
good morning gigitty. and my wife works with that kids dad. real quiet, Christian guy. that neighbor is in Manheim Township, pretty well off people

ArtMonkDrillz
06-18-2007, 08:08 AM
Oh God, I feel so terrible for the girl that found her family like that. I doubt she'll ever really recover from that kind of shock.

As for the father turning in his son, although it must have been extremely tough I think he pretty much did the right thing. Maybe they should have contacted a lawyer together and then the boy could have turned himself in.
If this was just a thrill crime then I think the father absolutely did the right thing because who knows what this kid is capable of after something so terrible.

724Skinsfan
06-18-2007, 08:13 AM
Man, that's weird. I just read that story last week but it was unsolved at the time. I can't remember where I read it...weird.

Anyway, back to your question. I would turn in anyone if they confessed to murdering another person. I'd probably turn in someone that confessed to even lesser criminal offenses. If it's an evil act, then I want you detained.

skinsfan_nn
06-18-2007, 08:38 AM
What a tragedy for the lost family members. How could it be that bad.

Schneed10
06-18-2007, 09:02 AM
Apparently Lancaster PA IS one badass place.

All kidding aside this is sad. The boy kills a whole family and then confesses to his father who promptly turned him in to police.


Teen charged in slaying of Pa. family - Crime & Punishment - MSNBC.com (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19268067/)


This is a tough one. Would you turn in one of your kids? I'm not sure I wouldn't try to help him in some way.

For murder, yeah, I have to turn the person in.

For a crime like selling drugs or driving drunk, I wouldn't involve police, I'd just set the kid straight myself.

But on murder, I couldn't live with myself if I didn't turn him in. I'd also feel like a serious failure as a parent for raising such a psycho.

EARTHQUAKE2689
06-18-2007, 09:24 AM
For murder, yeah, I have to turn the person in.

For a crime like selling drugs or driving drunk, I wouldn't involve police, I'd just set the kid straight myself.

But on murder, I couldn't live with myself if I didn't turn him in. I'd also feel like a serious failure as a parent for raising such a psycho.


I agree with you 100% Schneed

dmek25
06-18-2007, 09:47 AM
For murder, yeah, I have to turn the person in.

For a crime like selling drugs or driving drunk, I wouldn't involve police, I'd just set the kid straight myself.

But on murder, I couldn't live with myself if I didn't turn him in. I'd also feel like a serious failure as a parent for raising such a psycho.
as you will find out, you can be the best parent in the world, and there comes a time when the kid starts thinking, and making their own decisions. all you can hope for is the best. do you think that all the parents of people that commit crimes are bad parents? i highly doubt it

Schneed10
06-18-2007, 09:59 AM
as you will find out, you can be the best parent in the world, and there comes a time when the kid starts thinking, and making their own decisions. all you can hope for is the best. do you think that all the parents of people that commit crimes are bad parents? i highly doubt it

No certainly not. I should clarify myself, because I really meant to say that I couldn't help feeling like a failure, regardless of whether or not it's actually my fault.

Sometimes people just get sick in the head and do nutso stuff, and that has nothing to do with parenting, it just comes down to a chemical imbalance in the brain. But it's just that feeling that every parent would get in that situation, you'd tend to blame yourself, and feel like you failed your child somehow.

I don't know many parents that could shrug off these actions and just say "well it was his dumb decision, not mine." Every parent would feel like they failed their kid in that situation.

firstdown
06-18-2007, 10:27 AM
The best parents in the world can have some of the worst children in the World. Some of the wrost parents in the world can have some of the best and brights kids in the world. With that said the better the parent the better the CHANCE the child will turn into a good moral person.

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