The Brooklyn federal court filing demands that officials immediately stop calling Gerard Domond "an inmate" - along with a $50 million claim for damages for "mental anguish." In 1987, Gerard, then a 24-year-old with a lengthy rap sheet, killed a man in Brooklyn in a drug deal gone wrong.

Now 49, he is at the Clinton Correctional Facility and eligible for parole in May 2013. Acting as her own lawyer, Marie insists: "The suggestive nature of the word is disgraceful. This cruel psychological programming has weighed heavily on our emotional and psychological well-being."
"It's something that's bothered me for a long time," Marie said. "I couldn't understand why no one recognized that somebody being labelled an inmate, why they wouldn't recognize that. To me it just sounded very wrong."
5 comments:
"Mental anguish" *rolls eyes* Poor baby.
There are, of course, also other words that cause similar suffering, such as 'prisoner' (includes the condescending 'son'), 'criminal' (suggests the target practices homosexual intercourse with his cellmate Albert: 'I'm in Al') and of course 'convict' (also hints at gay relationships, this time with Victor: 'on Vic')
Convicted murderers are such delicate flowers.
Hahahahahah....
Sigh.
The stupid, it burns.
Can I counter-sue them for mental anguish for pretending to be human beings????
Can I sue her for wasting my taxpayer dollars?
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