State charges included kidnapping, first-degree burglary and false imprisonment of husband of Nancy Pelosi

The man who was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison for attacking the husband of Nancy Pelosi with a hammer in their California home was sentenced on Tuesday to life in prison without the possibility of parole following a separate state trial.

A San Francisco jury in June found David DePape guilty of charges including aggravated kidnapping, first-degree burglary and false imprisonment of an elder.

Before issuing the sentence, Judge Harry Dorfman dismissed arguments from DePape’s attorneys that he be granted a new trial for the 2022 attack against Paul Pelosi, who was 82 years old at the time.

“It’s my intention that Mr DePape will never get out of prison, he can never be paroled,” Dorfman said while handing out the punishment.

  • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    “This is a man who has always been a peaceful, law-abiding person up until his activation,” Lipson said.

    When given the chance to address the court before his sentencing, DePape, dressed in prison orange and with his brown hair in a ponytail, spoke at length about September 11 being an inside job, his ex-wife being replaced by a body double, and his government-provided attorneys conspiring against him.

    “I’m a psychic,” DePape told the court, reading from sheets of paper. “The more I meditate, the more psychic I get.”

    And the attorney wants them to reconsider the sentence? Sounds like he needs some serious therapy, and institutionalized, not let out.

  • JeSuisUnHombre@lemm.ee
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    11 days ago

    The comments here are pretty gross. This guy needs help, instead you’re happy to send him to the corrupt American prison system for the rest of his life. Please stop bootlicking and start caring for people.

    • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      I also despise the prison industrial complex and prefer rehabilitation over punishment, but there’s a point where losses need to be cut.

      He doesn’t seem remorseful, and he’s not going to seek help when he believes he is justified in beating an elderly man with a hammer. At that point, what options are left? it’s immoral to involuntarily institutionalize and forcibly medicate individuals, and even if it wasn’t, that’s a slippery slope you don’t want to go down.

      • JeSuisUnHombre@lemm.ee
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        11 days ago

        Why do you think it’s immoral to involuntarily institutionalize but moral to lock them in a jail cell?

        • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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          11 days ago

          I never said that was moral either. I hold the stance that, despite the utter lack of most freedoms, at least you get to maintain some semblance of bodily autonomy while in prison.

          On the other hand, forced institutionalization with involuntarily sedation and/or medication is directly violating bodily autonomy. We don’t need to return to the days of deciding to “fix” people without their permission like we used to with transorbital lobotomies.

          • JeSuisUnHombre@lemm.ee
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            11 days ago

            I don’t know why you think there’s more autonomy in a mental institution than prison, or why you keep bringing up forcing drugs and surgery on people like that’s the only way to help people with mental health issues. Your stance is still not making sense from a moral standpoint.

            Edit: just want to note that the first sentence of the comment above wasn’t there when reply was written

            • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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              11 days ago

              Mental illness treatment and rehabilitation is the path forward, but it’s not a one-size-fits all solution. I was more direct about this in my other comments: What do you do with people who don’t want help and actively refuse to be rehabilitated?

              Practically speaking:

              You can’t reintegrate them into society as they are.
              You can’t ship them off to an island in the southern hemisphere and wash your hands of them.

              Morally speaking:

              You can’t execute them.
              You can’t lock them up.
              You can’t treat them against their will.

              What now?

              ————————

              The American prison industrial complex is a privatized slavery-for-profit feedback loop, yes. It’s an atrocity that needs to be dismantled and replaced with a justice system with rehabilitation and reparation as its core tenets. But, the inevitable truth is that either prisons must exist in some form as the lesser of many evils, or you voluntarily choose to repeat the atrocities of our past.

              I’m not arguing against treating and rehabiliting people who have made mistakes. I’m arguing that championing it as the solution to prisons is either an overly-optimistic pipedream, or a hypocritical display of indifference to the idea of involiable bodily autonomy.

              • JeSuisUnHombre@lemm.ee
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                11 days ago

                You seem unable to separate rehabilitation / treatment for mental health from medical interventions and drugs.

                What I’m arguing is that punishment is not justice. No person should have the right to dole out punishments to another. To think otherwise betrays a very authoritarian mindset.

                I don’t have a 500 page document detailing a new version of our justice system, partly because, as you correctly stated, there isn’t a one size fits all solution. But I know whatever system that is should be focused on empathy and compassion, not making people pay for their misdeeds.

                But even if I completely agreed with what you’re saying, I would still think it’s gross to cheer for anyone being sent to “an atrocity that needs to be dismantled and replaced”, especially if it’s for the rest of their lives.

                • Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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                  11 days ago

                  What I’m arguing is that punishment is not justice

                  I don’t know if I agree with this tbh. Bad people deserve a chance to reform, but at a certain point they start deserving bad things.

                • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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                  11 days ago

                  You have to stop people from victimizing society and the kknds of folks who normally do so regularly ignore dialogue.

                  If someone rapes women you may not be able to fix them but you can be sure most of society won’t be in danger while he is in prison.