Well I'm sure that after five years she's come out all rehabilitated and repentant and all that, ready to take her place as contributing member of society and as a staunch defender of the rights of others. Because if there is one place that teaches compassion and respect for the milk of human kindness it's the prison-industrial complex of the US.
And I get some of the hostility toward the camera guy, but on the other hand with out video I doubt there would have been this kind of resolution. It was the video that made the authorities sit up and have to do something. Otherwise it would have been just another instance of ghetto people acting all ghetto at a ghetto Micky-Dees.
As for harsh sentences and all that, why do you think that one of the strongest and most vocal opponents to 3-Strikes Laws are police associations? While the rape of Brandon Teena was directly tied to the TG status deal, I'm sure most of the murder had to do with the 3 strikes crap in Nebraska. Because once they knew they were facing their third felony, they had nothing left to lose by killing him. And hell, kill everyone else there too - the penalty is the same. In most states I'd do more time for selling you cocaine then if I raped you. You'd think that with harsh penalty like that no one would would ever come near coke, but it does not work out like that. Matter of fact the entire drug law structure is far harsher than the crime, and over time (that whole war on drugs thing) have become even harsher, yet the amount of drugs, as well as the number of users has not declined. Texas is the number one state in terms of the death penalty. You'd think that after a year or two of that (and it's been going on for decades) crime would drop off, or at least the murder rate would. But no. States with the Death Penalty have higher crime rates that states that don't have it.
While harsh sentences make normal law-abiding people feel better, the fact is that the people who would/should worry about it are not normal or law-abiding, and they think in a different way. And harsher sentences only serve to increase the levels of crime because if you're going to be in for a penny, you might as well be in for a pound.