When it comes to looking at dirty pictures Arizona has some of the most draconian laws in the nation. I think our laws require you to get 10 year in prison for EACH dirty picture you are arrested with and the sentences are required to be served consecutively. So if you get caught with 10 dirty pictures you are looking at 100 years in prison.
Personally I think it's wrong for the government to throw people into prison for victimless crimes, like looking at dirty pictures. Or having consensual sex. There are a few hateful gun grabbing, ACLU Democrat atheists I know who hate Libertarians and twist those word around and same how say I am a gay, p*d*ph*l* who loves child p*rn, but that's rubbish. Those are the same atheists who seem to think they are better then the rest of us because they claim to be "humanist".
Glendale Union substitute teacher gets 10 years on child pornography charges Sarah Anderson, The Republic | azcentral.com 12:27 p.m. MST May 6, 2016 A substitute teacher in the Glendale Union High School District was sentenced to 10 years in prison after school administrators found child pornography on a thumb drive. On March 1, Gregory Paul Parr pleaded guilty to one count of sexual exploitation of a minor and two counts of attempted sexual exploitation of a minor. He originally had been charged with multiple counts of sexual exploitation of a minor. He was sentenced Friday by Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Peter Reinstein. He was credited with the 410 days he had served before his sentencing. Parr would be under supervised probation for the rest of his life and would have to register as a sex offender, the judge ruled. Parr was teaching at Cortez High School in Phoenix when the thumb drive was found in a classroom in February 2015. He was a substitute teacher in the district from September 2013 until his arrest, with no previous criminal history. Administrators looked at the files on the drive in an effort to see who owned it. In addition to family photos found of Parr and photos of his cat, they also found what looked like child pornography, with boys and girls ages 8 to 15 engaged in sexual acts. Prosecutor Kyra Goddard said while there was no evidence that he was involved in producing the images or participating in them, the act of possessing them is a crime. While it seems harmless enough, it isn't, Goddard said. One of the photo subjects said whenever she goes to the grocery store, she looks at the people around her and wonders if they've seen the photo of her, according to Goddard. She also noted how he brought child pornography on a USB drive to a school, and then lost it, which could have exposed multiple students to the drive's contents if it had not been found by administrators. Philip Beatty, Parr's attorney, said that while his client did not see at first how possession of those pictures harmed people, Parr now appreciated how it exploited the victims. Parr said before his sentence was handed down that his wife is having a hard time of it, financially and emotionally. "I pray every day she doesn't end up on the streets," he said. Parr's family and friends showed up to the hearing, and Beatty noted that they promised to support not only Parr but his wife as well. |