I see Little also wants a summit to tell dairy farmers what products it should be selling overseas. He wants to move Fonterra's products up the value chain. I don't necessarily disagree with the dairy industry moving away from bulk milk powder to value added, but there is someone called a customer, and right now Fonterra's biggest customer, China, wants milk powder.
The last thing Fonterra needs is meddling politicians in their business affairs.
Three strikes law
Crown Law is appealing two cases where judges have refused to send killers to life in prison under the three-strikes law.
They are also considering appealing two recent cases where judges have used the "manifestly unjust" clause in the three-strikes law to avoid sending killers to life in jail. Life meaning life.
The law states if a murder is committed on a second or third strike, the sentence is automatically life without parole, unless it is "manifestly unjust".
Judges will not impose what they see as a harsh sentence - not one judge has done so. They're actually finding reasons to establish the "manifestly unjust" excuse.
The intent of Parliament was clearly to send the very worst criminals to jail for life and clearly judges are not interpreting the law that way.
Now you can argue the pros and cons of the three-strikes law, but it is what it is, and judges are ignoring the intent of the law deliberately.
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