andythinkpad
Member
I'd do the same. You try steal from me I will recover my property at any cost.
You will go to jail for a stupid wallet? How much money is in your wallet?
I'd do the same. You try steal from me I will recover my property at any cost.
The issue is she took the law in her own hands when she shouldn't have.
And I don't have a problem with that, the courts can handle it.
you dont have a problem with attempted murder?
Which is not murder. It is true that private citizens do not get much power over these matters as the state holds the monopoly on murder, and well the use of violence in general. By your reckoning it would indeed have been correct if the police had arrived and unloaded a magazine on him as often happens in these cases.Yes he did survive. But noticed that she's charge with misdemeanor assault with a deadly weapon. She didn't get a key for the city from the Mayor cause she stopped a theft.
And as for your quote, it's not 40 B.C. It's 2017. we have a court of law that handles this shit. I don't know what your point is by using some old as Greek proverb like it applies.
They were stopped and she got her purse back. The suspect is still alive.Again, if she had gotten it back or stopped him, no one here would be complaining. That's not the issue. The issue is she took the law in her own hands when she shouldn't have.
She was not charged with attempted murder nor do her actions qualify to such. In fact even if he had died in the process worse case would have been involuntary manslaughter.you dont have a problem with attempted murder?
In this case not really no.
you have issues, i certainly hope you talk to someone about it
And I don't have a problem with that, the courts can handle it.
The court will put your ass in prison that's what.
Its not so much her trying to kill him as it would be him throwing his life away for a purse. This was his choice.you dont have a problem with attempted murder?
Its not so much her trying to kill him as it would be him throwing his life away for a purse. This was his choice.
Why would they? I haven't done anything.
such sentiment that we allow states to even wield such powers in the first place.
They were stopped and she got her purse back. The suspect is still alive.
Now if the intent was to enact revenge or explicitly exact punishment on the suspect one would have a point.
She was not charged with attempted murder nor do her actions qualify to such. In fact even if he had died in the process worse case would have been involuntary manslaughter.
Though she'd have been far more likely to have faced actual sentencing for that.
She chased him down and tackled him. In a 1.5tn steel box.She assaulted a man who was no longer a threat to her by running him over. She didn't chase him down and tackle him.
Don't equate the two.
He threw the keys in her hand and tied her foot to the pedal?
lol did dook really get banned for thisA shame she didn't kill the guy so the fetus could absorb his life force.
I mean, she walked over to the vehicle and he was "rummaging around inside it".she put his hands on her purse and told him to run as fast as he could?
Murder requires clear malicious intent to kill. The common law principle for most crimes is 'Actus reus and mens rea' (a guilty act followed by a guilty mind) this is carried into the US as due process. If she had in fact killed him she would have been charged with manslaughter, either voluntary or involuntary depending again on the individual circumstance. Being provoked by the victim would also tend to reduce the crime to manslaughter in many cases.I'm actually surprised she wasn't charged for attempted murder.
Sure thing Mr internet psychologist.
Oh no. Is this Matthew? I'm sure Jesus was thinking of this when he said that.πάντες γὰρ οἱ λαβόντες μάχαιραν ἐν μαχαίρῃ ἀπολοῦνται
Murder requires clear malicious intent to kill. The common law principle for most crimes is 'Actus reus and mens rea' (a guilty act followed by a guilty mind) this is carried into the US as due process. If she had in fact killed him she would have been charged with manslaughter, either voluntary or involuntary depending again on the individual circumstance. Being provoked by the victim would also tend to reduce the crime to manslaughter in many cases.
Murder requires clear malicious intent to kill. The common law principle for most crimes is 'Actus reus and mens rea' (a guilty act followed by a guilty mind) this is carried into the US as due process. If she had in fact killed him she would have been charged with manslaughter, either voluntary or involuntary depending again on the individual circumstance. Being provoked by the victim would also tend to reduce the crime to manslaughter in many cases.
Might as well have. Oops is that victim blaming?He threw the keys in her hand and tied her foot to the pedal?
It depends. It is pretty unlikely you would be able to prove intention to kill and malice aforethought in court in this kind of case which are the main distinctions between murder and manslaughter. You also run the risk that jury would be sympathetic to the assailant in this case and might be tempted to acquit if you tried to push for second degree murder rather than a lesser offence.Hmmm, there'd be room to push it as second degree murder, had it happened.
It would be the combination of circumstances, provacation, confusion, and likely lack of murderous intent.This is something I was wondering about. Someone earlier in the thread said it wouldn't matter if you were assaulting someone in such a way to have a high chance of killing them- which is the case?
She chased him down and tackled him in the only way she could. It's his fault not stealing from a person capable of chasing him down in less lethal manner.She assaulted a man who was no longer a threat to her by running him over. She didn't chase him down and tackle him.
Don't equate the two.
It depends. It is pretty unlikely you would be able to prove intention to kill and malice aforethought in court in this kind of case which are the main distinctions between murder and manslaughter. You also run the risk that jury would be sympathetic to the assailant in this case and might be tempted to acquit if you tried to push for second degree murder rather than a lesser offence.
She chased him down and tackled him in the only way she could. It's his fault not stealing from a person capable of chasing him down in less lethal manner.
The amount of victim blaming in this thread is rather comical really.
Wouldn't a pregnant women being mugged be the perfect opportunity where a gun would be used in self defense?This line of reasoning is faulty because it can just as easily be argued if all she had was a gun. Which would make no goddamn sense.
Wouldn't a pregnant women being mugged be the perfect opportunity where a gun would be used in self defense?
Humanity is a failed experiment.
In this case not really no.
Wouldn't a pregnant women being mugged be the perfect opportunity where a gun would be used in self defense?
In this case not really no.
Personally, I think if somebody has stolen something from you, and you harm them in an attempt to get it back, that's fair game, so long as you don't use more force than is necessary to retrieve what was stolen (as otherwise it becomes revenge, which isn't OK).
The only option this woman had to get her purse back was to do what she did.
Why should she have to stand back and let the thief have her stuff? Better they be the victim than her.
This line of reasoning is faulty because it can just as easily be argued if all she had was a gun. Which would make no goddamn sense.
I mean, what she did was obviously stupid. But I can't bring myself to feel TOO badly for people robbing pregnant women in Walmart parking lots..
This type of comment is used very frequently in Trump topics (to the point that it has lost all meaning) and most of the time it's not really fitting there, let alone here.
Personally, I think if somebody has stolen something from you, and you harm them in an attempt to get it back, that's fair game, so long as you don't use more force than is necessary to retrieve what was stolen (as otherwise it becomes revenge, which isn't OK).
The only option this woman had to get her purse back was to do what she did.
Why should she have to stand back and let the thief have her stuff? Better they be the victim than her.
How so, if she had a gun and used it to stop him it would be fine too long as she doesn't end up executing him. She basically used the only option she could to get her stuff back and certainly wasn't attempting to murder him, otherwise she would have run over him again to finish him off. Sure he could have died during the process but that wasn't the intention and it's not like she had any other choice if she wanted to stop him, it's completely on him.