What happens when you don't have the death penalty
El Salvador doesn't have much of a death penalty.
According to Amnesty International:
The death penalty was abolished in El Salvador in 1983 for all but exceptional crimes. Under article 27 of the 1983 Constitution it can only be imposed during times of international war on those convicted of certain offences defined in the Military Code, such as treason, desertion, espionage and sedition.
They have a lot of laws like that, all Sorosy and Western European on the human rights front, with one right after another for criminals, who get let off either by the laws or through corruption. So now they have a lot of killers. El Salvador is home to the MS-13 and Calle 18 gangs who are closely allied with Mexico's cartels and America's prison gangs, and they're all criminals including killers. With no fear of the death penalty, or any rule of law for that matter, they've proliferated.
Just one problem, though: The public got tired of this, and the reaction in that country wasn't vigilantism, but rough justice. President Nayib Bukele, a loose cannon of a president, built a gargantuan mega-prison to shut the crime down.
It was crude and brutal, with huge sweeps of criminals off the streets, and according to reports, some innocent people were lumped in and swept up with the violent thugs and thrown with them into the can, too.
The Daily Mail ran a photo spread showing just how hideous and dehumanizing the prison is.
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