Originally posted by lordlundar
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Compare and contrast the police's actions
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i dunno, i'm kinda on the "arrest everyone until the story is all checked out" side of things. i mean, sure it was a home invasion situation, but what if it had been one of those random, misunderstanding tragedies? (someone trying to sneak in home late, for example)
IMHO if someone is willing to pick up a firearm and shoot at someone, to kill or to harm, they can deal with the inconvenience of police questioning. if you are already willing to end a life (whether you do or not), then you should be willing to deal with two days in a cell. cuz the other guy may be rest of his life under grass.All uses of You, You're, and etc are generic unless specified otherwise.
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Originally posted by draco664 View PostI didn't see the differences in law as the stark difference. I saw the differences in attitude towards the victims.
The UK isn't an "oppressive regime" for doing this---and I know no one flat out said that. If it isn't clear that the situation was self-defense, I can understand wanting to take those involved into custody while its investigated, but in this case, it should have been obviously self-defense. I dislike the attitude often shown toward people who want to defend themselves.
Then again, part of me enjoys poetic justice. I like turning on the news and seeing a story about someone trying to hold up a store only to have the clerk send them out on a stretcher. Several years ago, CNN ran a story about a Marine who got mugged by two guys, one who had a knife. The Marine fought back and killed one of the muggers and put the other in the hospital. No charges were filed against the Marine. I'm sure some people will look down their noses at me for it, but I actually liked that story.
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Originally posted by siead_lietrathua View Posti dunno, i'm kinda on the "arrest everyone until the story is all checked out" side of things. i mean, sure it was a home invasion situation, but what if it had been one of those random, misunderstanding tragedies? (someone trying to sneak in home late, for example)
IMHO if someone is willing to pick up a firearm and shoot at someone, to kill or to harm, they can deal with the inconvenience of police questioning. if you are already willing to end a life (whether you do or not), then you should be willing to deal with two days in a cell. cuz the other guy may be rest of his life under grass.Some People Are Alive Only Because It's Illegal To Kill Them.
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Originally posted by siead_lietrathua View Postbut what if it had been one of those random, misunderstanding tragedies? (someone trying to sneak in home late, for example)
Originally posted by draco664 View PostNah, for my money the cops were looking for something to charge them with.
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Originally posted by draco664 View PostOne guy shot in the hand, another in the arm. And it takes the cops 2 days of questioning to determine that it was reasonable?
Nah, for my money the cops were looking for something to charge them with.
So what probably happened is the robbers claimed "The crazy bastard jumped me!" and so the police had to investigate further. It would be complicated by the fact the robbers had fled. not to mention, exactly where & how the robbers were hit.( what angle the bullets went in at, etc.
so it's not actually simple, which explains why the homeowner was held for so long. Yes, it sucks for the homeowner. But it's the result of how the current guidelines on reasonable force in defending from a burglar are written. ( it's actually an improvement, BTW. before these guidelines were drawn up, the burglar needed to have a gun themselves.)
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Originally posted by Zod View PostI'll always remember that Japanese tourist who, while in the US, wrote an address down wrong, went to the wrong house, and the home owner gunned him down without a second thought.
However, three guys coming into a house through the basement, is a horse of an utterly different color.
Originally posted by Zod View PostDrug dealing. One of the shot people said that they'd only gone to the farm house as they'd heard that it was used as a cannabis farm.
Also, there was no mention of drugs in the articles I read.
And the homeowners were held for three days pending the investigation, despite the rule of UK law that unless it was a serious charge, and I cannot fathom how a shotgun loaded with bird shot and fired at the mid-section could be considered anything other than a dissuasive measure, they can be held for no more than 36 hours.
Considering that the homeowners were released on Wednesday (still longer than the 72-hour maximum limit), the same day that one of the burglars (more than one of which has a history of burglary charges) pled guilty to attempting to burgle their home, the idea that the Ferries were suspected of a drug offense goes out the window.
And, once the drug offense is off the table, one has to wonder, again, why they felt the need to arrest both parties when only one shot was fired and the husband admitted to being the one to pull the trigger.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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And, once the drug offense is off the table, one has to wonder, again, why they felt the need to arrest both parties when only one shot was fired and the husband admitted to being the one to pull the trigger.
I don't know.
So what probably happened is the robbers claimed "The crazy bastard jumped me!" and so the police had to investigate further."My in-laws are country people and at night you can hear their distinctive howl."
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Originally posted by Andara Bledin View PostI remember that story, too. And another one that also showed up here about a guy who shot someone who came to their door because they were black.
However, three guys coming into a house through the basement, is a horse of an utterly different color.
Sometimes criminals lie.
Originally posted by Andara Bledin View Post
Does it really take two days to check out whether a single-unit farm is growing marijuana?
Originally posted by Andara Bledin View Post
Also, there was no mention of drugs in the articles I read.
If only the police had believed Mr. White when he said he was just a simple homeowner . . .
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...g-2366996.html
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Originally posted by HYHYBT View PostWhat is there, exactly, to investigate in that case? What is there, other than the stories of the people involved which they have immediately, to look into to see which is being truthful?
2) I would assume by trying to reconstruct the crime.
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Originally posted by s_stabeler View Post1) if you can't prove the homeowner used reasonable force, then they will assume the homeowner didn't.
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Originally posted by Zod View PostOriginally Posted by Andara Bledin
Does it really take two days to check out whether a single-unit farm is growing marijuana?
Originally Posted by Andara Bledin
Also, there was no mention of drugs in the articles I read.
If only the police had believed Mr. White when he said he was just a simple homeowner . . .
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk...g-2366996.html
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Originally posted by draco664 View Post
You do realise those articles refer to two different cases, don't you? And you note that the first article, which is about the case in question, mentioned drugs only in the way that there weren't any.
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Originally posted by draco664 View PostDo you honestly not see a problem with police assuming guilt if they cannot prove innocence? Because, seriously, it should be 100% the opposite.
If the police find someone in a situation of legally questionable content - say, just having shot someone, or broken into a home, or whatever - then, in my mind, they should absolutely arrest that person until they find out what, exactly, happened.
I mean, my car is my car, right? So, if I notice that I have locked my keys in the car, and, for whatever reason, deem it appropriate to break a window in order to retrieve the keys, then that's nobody's business but mine, right? However, if the police were to catch me in the act, and I didn't have license and registration on me to prove ownership of the car - prove my innocence, as it were - then I'd truly appreciate it if they took me into custody until such proof could be rendered. Because then I'd know that they'd take the same measures if someone were to actually steal my car."You are who you are on your worst day, Durkon. Anything less is a comforting lie you tell yourself to numb the pain." - Evil
"You're trying to be Lawful Good. People forget how crucial it is to keep trying, even if they screw it up now and then." - Good
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