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Sugar Cookie

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A 52-year-old man imprisoned as a juvenile for a 1984 triple murder waived his right to a resentencing Friday in Oakland County Circuit Court.

Michael Kvam was two months shy of his 18th birthday on July 7, 1984, when he raped and repeatedly stabbed Joann Bray, 27; Wendy Lovell, 15; and Chastity Bray, 9, in their home in then-Avon Township, now Rochester Hills.

Two younger children, aged 4 and 1, were left in the home with the bodies of their family members.

“Dying here is what I deserve,” Kvam told Judge Nanci Grant on Friday during a video conference recorded from prison. “…There are no mitigating circumstances at all.”

The victims' relatives showed up in Grant's courtroom Friday to request that Kvam never be released from prison.

The hearing was required due to a 2012 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that found persons under the age of 18 years old who were sentenced to life without parole should be resentenced.

The Kvam case was so gruesome that at Kvam’s original sentencing, then-Judge George LaPlata, an admitted lifelong opponent of the death penalty, said it made him rethink his belief such a sentence was too harsh. LaPlata said at sentencing he hoped Kvam would never be released from prison.

In a 2016 filing, Oakland County assistant prosecutor John Skrzynski said Kvam’s lack of remorse for his crimes was “demonstrated by the fact that after Defendant assaulted and murdered the three victims, he and the co-defendant cleaned up a bit around the house, stopped off for a bite to eat, and then went to work.”

Kvam’s co-defendant, William Fischer, is also serving a life sentence for the slayings. Fischer, now 75, was an adult at the time of the incident and is not entitled to similar reconsideration of his sentence.

Skrzynski said nearly three years ago, Kvam had committed 55 major misconducts behind bars, including assaults on prison staff (including a stabbing) and inmates that often resulted in him being placed in administrative segregation.

A forensic evaluation found Kvam to have an “anti-social behavior disorder” with the Michigan Department of Corrections categorizing him as having a very high risk of violence and a high risk to property — the highest ratings available.
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If he had to be cared for all these years, plus all the years he has left, they should bring back 'hard labour', where he would have been forced to work to recompence the state for his keep. If he had been forced to work 16 hours a day, he would have been too tired from get into all that mischief behind bars.
 
Maniacs like this one are the main reason I'm all for death penalty in cases where the killer is a sexually perverse psychopath who cannot be managed even in prison. Why keep him alive, what purpose does it serve? He's still victimizing people on taxpayer's dime.
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If he had to be cared for all these years, plus all the years he has left, they should bring back 'hard labour', where he would have been forced to work to recompence the state for his keep. If he had been forced to work 16 hours a day, he would have been too tired from get into all that mischief behind bars.
Absolutely. But nowadays, progress means that sometimes you are forced to be humane to the people totally devoid of humanity.
 
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So sad that my home state doesn't have the death penalty for sick fucks like him. At least he waived his right to a resentencing. Hope he gets his head crushed before he is so old that my tax dollars have to pay for his care.
 
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