FLORIDA LAWMAKER'S DICTIONARY
The Florida dictionary according to lawmakers The Florida lawmakers seem to be reading a different dictionary from the rest of us if you examine the Jennifer Mee case. Jennifer was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole after she was party to a fatal robbery. At no stage did she ever intend to kill the victim. So we come to our first word, "Premeditated." What does that word mean? "Planned in advance," "a premeditated attack." In Jennifer's case, robbery was planned in advance but not the victim. I understand that first and second degree murder is a killing which was premeditated. Then how did Jennifer get to be charged with first degree murder? Next word is "manslaughter." At school the teacher told us the difference between murder and manslaughter is murder is when you killed someone intentionally while manslaughter is when you accidently killed someone. So if a drunk driver kills someone is it murder ...