All posts tagged: Sentences

Bukele signs reforms allowing life prison sentences for people as young as 12 : NPR

Bukele signs reforms allowing life prison sentences for people as young as 12 : NPR

El presidente de El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, habla durante una conferencia de prensa con el presidente electo de Chile en el palacio presidencial en San Salvador, El Salvador, el viernes 30 de enero de 2026. Salvador Melendez/AP hide caption toggle caption Salvador Melendez/AP SAN SALVADOR — Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele on Wednesday signed into law constitutional reforms to permit life prison sentences for people as young as 12, a contentious reform that follows other heavy-handed measures pushed through by the populist leader. The change was passed last month by the Legislative Assembly, which is controlled by Bukele’s party, and would apply to people convicted of committing or acting as an accomplice to crimes including homicide, femicide, rape and gang membership. The measure was pushed forward by Bukele’s cabinet. Previously, the maximum sentence in El Salvador was 60 years for adults and less for youths. The reforms slated to take effect April 26 would create new criminal courts to try cases. They also stipulate a mandatory review of life terms decades into the sentences, depending on …

France sentences tanker captain as EU countries crack down on Russian shadow fleet – POLITICO

France sentences tanker captain as EU countries crack down on Russian shadow fleet – POLITICO

Other coastal states, including Finland, Sweden, Estonia and Belgium, have intercepted suspected shadow fleet vessels in the Baltic and North Seas. This has “in some cases, forced the Kremlin to adapt by reflagging shadow-fleet tankers … while occasionally deploying military escorts,” Charlie Edwards, a senior fellow for strategy and national security at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, wrote in a recent article. But high-profile boardings like that of the Boracay only stop a fraction of shadow fleet vessels cruising off European coasts. “Few European capitals can sustain a high-tempo posture for long, leaving random boardings looking potentially escalatory without being strategically decisive,” Edwards noted. Governments across Europe are seeking to firm up their authority. Last week, the U.K. granted British forces new powers to board and detain sanctioned vessels. The Netherlands is mulling legal changes to target ships carrying false flags. The current legislation is “unclear,” said Fred Soons, a professor in international law at Utrecht University. The EU, which has banned hundreds of suspected shadow fleet vessels from its ports, is also pushing a …

“Sounds like run-on sentences”: Manilow wonders what happened to pop hooks

“Sounds like run-on sentences”: Manilow wonders what happened to pop hooks

Barry Manilow is still obsessed with craft. Ahead of his 55th album, the “Mandy” singer took a deep dive into modern pop. He wanted to take a crack at writing like artists like Billie Eilish, but he couldn’t make heads or tails of it. Speaking to The Times of London, he said that radio pop in 2026 is one long ramble. “I really studied what’s going on out there — artists like Billie Eilish. I tried to write like her but I just couldn’t because I’m used to verse, chorus, bridge, chorus, ending — but pop music now just sounds like run-on sentences,” he said. “Where is the chorus? Hook? Song after song is like that.” It is perhaps unsurprising that Manilow reached for Eilish as his guide to modern pop. Beyond her megahits, Eilish’s sexuality fueled tabloid gossip for years. Manilow has been a relationship with his now husband since the late ’70s, but he only publicly came out as gay in 2018. He told the Times that coming out at the time would …

Will ending short prison sentences fix prison overcrowding? What an expert thinks

Will ending short prison sentences fix prison overcrowding? What an expert thinks

The UK’s latest law on sentencing came into force on March 22. Among other changes, the new law means that, in England and Wales, people who would previously have been sent to prison for short sentences will instead serve those sentences in the community. This means they will need to attend appointments with probation, do certain rehabilitative activities and may also be restricted from doing certain things or going to certain areas. They might also be required to do a set number of hours of community service. The new law requires courts to avoid imposing custodial sentences of less than 12 months, except in exceptional circumstances. It also extends the maximum sentence that can be suspended from two years to three. This gives judges discretion to suspend sentences for more serious offences that would previously have required immediate custody. Possession with intent to supply class A drugs (where a guilty plea can reduce a starting-point sentence to three years); street robbery; the most serious forms of controlling and coercive behaviour; and a third conviction for …

Anne Lamott and Neal Allen share ’36 Ways to Improve Your Sentences’

Anne Lamott and Neal Allen share ’36 Ways to Improve Your Sentences’

On the Shelf Good Writing: 36 Ways to Improve Your Sentences By Neal Allen and Anne Lamott Avery: 208 pages, $27 If you buy books linked on our site, The Times may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookstores. They’re so darn cute together, these two. Neal Allen, father of four, newspaper reporter turned corporate executive turned spiritual coach turned author of two spiritual guidebooks, stands a full head of hair taller than his dread-headed wife, who calls him her “current husband.” He calls her his “remarkable and beautiful partner” and himself “Mr. Anne Lamott.” And no wonder. Author Anne Lamott has published 21 books, with worldwide sales in the millions. “Bird by Bird,” her 1994 writing handbook, which has sold more than 1 million copies and continues to sell approximately 40,000 copies each year, became a meme before there were memes. Thirty-two years later, the titular phrase has made appearances everywhere from “Ted Lasso” (Coach Beard: “I hate losing.” Coach Lasso: “Bird by bird, Coach.”) to a Gloria Steinem interview in …

Prosecution requests questionably harsh sentences at murdered teacher Samuel Paty’s appeals trial

Prosecution requests questionably harsh sentences at murdered teacher Samuel Paty’s appeals trial

Gaëlle Paty (center), sister of murdered teacher Samuel Paty, leaves the court in Paris, on January 26, 2026. BERTRAND GUAY/AFP The more closely one examines the unprecedented case of the appeals trial for the murder of history and geography teacher Samuel Paty, the less it seems coherent in penal terms. After four hours of closing arguments on Friday, February 27, the prosecution requested a 20-year prison sentence for the two men behind the hate campaign that led to Paty’s beheading by a radicalized young Chechen national. The men, Brahim Chnina, the father of a middle school student, and Islamist agitator Abdelhakim Sefrioui, were both charged with terrorist criminal conspiracy. The severity of the requested sentences was the first surprise in the prosecution’s closing statements. At the initial trial, in December 2024, the two men were sentenced to 13 and 15 years, though the prosecution, which was then represented by the National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor’s Office, had only requested 10 and 12-year sentences. Now, 14 months later, with the general prosecutor’s office having taken over from the …

Judge Sentences Teen to Life Without Parole for North Carolina Mass Shooting That Killed 5

Judge Sentences Teen to Life Without Parole for North Carolina Mass Shooting That Killed 5

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A judge sentenced an 18-year-old who acknowledged killing five people in a North Carolina mass shooting to life in prison without parole Friday, rejecting arguments that he deserved the chance for release decades from now. Austin David Thompson was 15 during the Oct. 13, 2022, attack that began at his Raleigh home when he shot and repeatedly stabbed his 16-year-old brother, James. Equipped with firearms and wearing camouflage, Thompson then fatally shot four others — including an off-duty city police officer — in his neighborhood and along a greenway. He was arrested in a shed after a self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head. Thompson pleaded guilty last month to five counts of first-degree murder and five other counts less than two weeks before his scheduled trial. Thompson, who did not speak publicly in court, was led away in handcuffs after the sentencing. Family members of the shooting victims cried as the sentence was handed down. Thompson’s attorneys announced plans to appeal the sentence. Superior Court Judge Paul Ridgeway had the option …

Hungarian court sentences German to 8 years in assault on neo-Nazis – POLITICO

Hungarian court sentences German to 8 years in assault on neo-Nazis – POLITICO

The Budapest court found Maja T. guilty of attempting to inflict life-threatening bodily harm and membership in a criminal organization. The prosecution had sought a 24-year prison sentence, arguing the verdict should serve as a deterrent; the defendant has a right to appeal. German politicians on the left condemned the court’s decision. “The Hungarian government has politicized the proceedings against Maja T. from the very beginning,” Helge Limburg, a Greens lawmaker focused on legal policy, wrote on X. “It’s a bad day for the rule of law.” The case sparked political tensions between Hungary and Germany after Maja T. went on a hunger strike in June to protest conditions in jail. Several German lawmakers later visited to express their solidarity, and German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul called on Hungary to improve detention conditions for Maja T. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s illiberal government is frequently accused of launching a culture war on LGBTQ+ people, including by moving to ban Pride events, raising concerns among German left-wing politicians and activists over the treatment of Maja T. by the …

South Korea Court Sentences Ex-First Lady Kim to Jail Term for Bribery

South Korea Court Sentences Ex-First Lady Kim to Jail Term for Bribery

By Kyu-seok Shim and Joyce Lee SEOUL, Jan 28 (Reuters) – ‌A ​South Korean court on Wednesday ‌sentenced former First Lady Kim Keon Hee to one year ​and eight months in jail after finding her guilty of accepting bribes from Unification Church officials ‍in return for political favours. The ​court cleared Kim, who is the wife of ex-President Yoon Suk Yeol who was ​ousted from ⁠office last year, on charges of stock price manipulation and violating the political funds act. The ruling, which can be appealed by the former first lady or prosecutors, comes amid a series of trials following investigations into Yoon’s brief imposition of martial law in ‌2024 and related scandals involving the once-powerful couple. Prosecutors had demanded 15 years in ​jail and ‌fines of 2.9 billion ‍won ($2 million) ⁠over accusations that include accepting luxury Chanel bags and a diamond necklace from South Korea’s Unification Church in return for political favours.    The court found there was not sufficient evidence to conclude Kim was guilty of manipulating stock prices and violating political funding …