Minister of Justice and Human Rights Council decision suggests Patrialis Akbar Corruption Court Judge who sentenced four years in prison for Anggodo Widjojo ironic.
"There are grandmothers who just because the issue was binis USD 5 million two-year sentence," he said at the Presidential Office, the State Palace Complex, Tuesday, August 31, 2010.
Anggodo, convicted of bribery cases KPK Commissioners, in session this afternoon at the Corruption Court sentenced four years in prison and fined Rp 150 million with a subsidiary three months.
Patrialis said the government could not interfere in the decision and fully deliver on penadilan. "I'm just giving comparisons. We can not do anything about it," he said.
He did not directly say the decision is ironic, Patrialis only compare with trivial cases such as the problem of money USD 50 thousand, there were sentenced to five months in prison. "Somebody stole HP, its HP restored, but still sentenced to nine months," he said.
But he did not explicitly say the judge's decision against Anggodo injure the public sense of justice. "If people feel there are less values of fairness, yes, the people who feel," he said.
"There are grandmothers who just because the issue was binis USD 5 million two-year sentence," he said at the Presidential Office, the State Palace Complex, Tuesday, August 31, 2010.
Anggodo, convicted of bribery cases KPK Commissioners, in session this afternoon at the Corruption Court sentenced four years in prison and fined Rp 150 million with a subsidiary three months.
Patrialis said the government could not interfere in the decision and fully deliver on penadilan. "I'm just giving comparisons. We can not do anything about it," he said.
He did not directly say the decision is ironic, Patrialis only compare with trivial cases such as the problem of money USD 50 thousand, there were sentenced to five months in prison. "Somebody stole HP, its HP restored, but still sentenced to nine months," he said.
But he did not explicitly say the judge's decision against Anggodo injure the public sense of justice. "If people feel there are less values of fairness, yes, the people who feel," he said.