Murderer in prison: shock about freedom for artificial fertilization!

Murderer in prison: shock about freedom for artificial fertilization!

Alicia Schiller, a murderer condemned in Australia, recently received detention for artificial fertilization, which triggered great outrage among their victim's members. Schiller, who was sentenced to 16 years in prison for the murder of the triple mother Tyrelle Tyrelle Tyrelle, was allowed to leave the detention center in order to carry out fertility treatment. Yvonne Gentle, the victim's mother, told "Today.at" her dismay and found: "That she has a chance of motherhood while Tyre was taken this opportunity is simply wrong." The circumstances of their crime, which resulted from a dispute over 50 Australian dollars, throw a dark shadow on this decision. As today.at reported .

The government of the state of Victoria said that the judgment of a highest court of prisoners enables access to fertility treatments as long as the detainees bear the costs themselves. If Alicia Schiller gets pregnant, she should look after the child up to the age of five behind bars before she is given to her mother. These possible developments come across violent criticism, especially from the bereaved of the murder victims. Jim Gentle, the father of Tyrelle, commented on the Situation: "The fact that she now gets such special treatments while we are still wearing the consequences is difficult to understand." This decision was perceived as a blatant injustice and made the affected family deeply.

A look in Schiller's past

Alicia Schiller's case is pursued by the media not only because of the shocking circumstances of their conviction, but also because of their personality and childhood. In order to understand the emotions and complexity of their character, it is important to focus on the psychological and social dimension of their early years. Schiller grew up in a family environment, which was strongly shaped by a strict, military value system, which it may have influenced in her later life decisions. Her growing up in a context that left little space for personal development could have contributed to the fact that she found herself in a hopeless situation that finally led to her fateful crime. as the Friedrich Schiller archive notes .

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