http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/07/27/helicopter.crash/index.htmlin that chase where the news helicopters crash they are charging the guy with murder of the 4 people that died in the helicopters. This isn't fair atall. Nobody forced them to follow the chase and they killed each other. Police have their own helicopter and I could maybe undersand a little bit if two police helicopters collided but this is nonsense.
7/29/2007 1:28:34 PM
message_topic.aspx?topic=487589&page=2
7/29/2007 1:35:31 PM
Fire those prosecutors.
7/29/2007 1:43:47 PM
there is a special place for a lot of lawyers in Hell
7/29/2007 1:45:20 PM
This phenomenon is nothing new in America's legal tradition. A Missouri man has been convicted of second-degree murder in the death of a police officer, even though he was hiding in a woods 30 miles away at the time.
7/29/2007 2:45:37 PM
you bring precedent and what the fuck are we supposed to say after that?.........this is retarded
7/29/2007 2:50:31 PM
^
7/29/2007 3:48:40 PM
^^^ thats different though because it was a cop
7/29/2007 3:53:53 PM
How? He is still accused of murdering someone he never saw, met, or thought about killing.
7/29/2007 6:35:12 PM
if I was a juror I would fucking laugh at the prosecution
7/29/2007 6:55:19 PM
but most people are stupid as shitthe line of reasoning behind this is retarded
7/30/2007 12:48:13 AM
^^^ cops have to respond
7/30/2007 5:47:53 AM
I can MAAAAAAYBE see the line of reasoning with the cop but the news team? give me a break.
7/30/2007 7:28:49 AM
If you are going to commit suicide, do so while someone else is robbing the store; that way, it was felony murder.
7/30/2007 8:23:29 AM
If you cared to read anything about the story instead of being a disingenuous fuck you'd have seen that the police officer died looking for the suspect. That is why that individual was charged and convicted.
7/30/2007 9:09:45 AM
wait wait, they are charging the deaths of the NEWS chopper dbags to the guy they were attempting to follow to get that "extra exclusive live feed!" yeah.... yeah....
7/30/2007 9:40:42 AM
^^^ will your family get the life insurance?
7/30/2007 10:17:47 AM
7/30/2007 3:13:09 PM
My problem is, imagine it was not the cop that died, imagine he lived, but he managed to run over and kill someone. Vehicular manslaughter? Nope, Felony Murder; the cop goes free. I guess the criminal should have know that some of his pursuers had been drinking and would be unable to drive with sufficient care to not kill himself or others.[Edited on July 30, 2007 at 3:31 PM. Reason : .,.]
7/30/2007 3:31:46 PM
the most overlooked ammendment in the country is the one against cruel and unusual punishment
7/30/2007 4:57:45 PM
7/30/2007 5:43:25 PM
^^ nah, the 10th Amendment gets molested more than any of them, I think...and peaceable assembly gets tossed aside some, too.
7/30/2007 6:46:22 PM
your house catches on fire, you call the fire dept., they hit a kid on your street and kill him. it is bullshit they want to charge him with the 4 deaths, he should get his ass tyhrown in jail for running but he did not kill those reporters.
7/30/2007 7:43:48 PM
guth, I would argue that the police officer should have known that drinking and driving was a bad plan, given that he was a FUCKING POLICE OFFICER. call me crazy, though.Oh, and the fact that he plowed into the back of another vehicle... Usually the law finds that when a person plows into the back of another vehicle, he is at fault, NOT the person in the front vehicle... yet, somehow, this random guy is responsible for this? riiiiiiiiiighhhht
7/31/2007 10:30:28 PM
What if the helicopters had crashed into homes on the ground and four people in those homes had been killed? Should the suspect have been charged with these deaths?What if someone had a heart attack from watching all of the excitement? In person? On TV? Should the suspect be charged in this death? What if a person were to be shot in the commission of a felony, and a doctor were called in from home to treat the suspect? If the doctor were to be killed in a car wreck on the way to the hospital, should the suspect be charged in this death?It starts to be a bit of a reach at some point.
8/1/2007 2:11:09 PM
Has no one argued for the affirmative yet?When you do something like start a car chase or rob a bank, you're willfully putting a number of people's lives in jeopardy.The fact that you're not directly killing people doesn't mean that you're not responsible for their deaths.
8/1/2007 2:52:33 PM
does that mean we can blame Osama for Iraq? cause 9/11 kind of caused us to go into Iraq
8/1/2007 2:53:41 PM
Well there's a gray area when dealing with the remoteness of the danger you're putting people into.Thus is why some people are ok with the cop scenario and not the helicopter scenario.When there's degrees of separation between you and the event then it gets less and less justifiable to blame someone for a death.
8/1/2007 3:00:04 PM
^^^ at most, it's still not murder. no more than manslaughter.
8/1/2007 3:07:46 PM
I'd disagree. The intent to do harm was there.Or rather, the intent to put people in serious danger was there.I'm not sure if this is a valid comparison, but I support this for the same reason we can prosecute drunk drivers for murder. You're not directly meaning to harm people, but you're willingly entering a situation in which you're putting lives in jeopardy.
8/1/2007 3:16:35 PM
^ But in that situation, a drunk driver is actually hitting the person whereas here there is a wholly separate incident where the driver may not have even been aware of these helicopters.There was a case a few years ago where this high school girl OD'd on a bunch of different drugs and they charged her friend with murder because he's the one who sold her the drugs. He didn't force her to take them or anything like that but they still tried to pin it on him and he was acquitted.People just want someone to blame.
8/1/2007 5:03:35 PM
8/1/2007 6:42:40 PM
8/2/2007 2:37:03 PM
You're rolling the dice regardless of whether you drink and drive, hold up a bank, or evade arrest.It doesn't seem dissimilar to me in anything other than physical proximity to the death you caused.
8/2/2007 2:43:35 PM
8/2/2007 2:52:10 PM
How long until someone is charged with negligent homicide regarding the bridge collapse in Minnesota?
8/2/2007 5:08:47 PM
8/2/2007 6:26:49 PM
http://www.odmp.org/officer.php?oid=18962so if the illegals were caught, is this murder?-------------------------------------------------- as to the helicopters - news choppers chose to get involved, I agree - not murder. I do think it interesting that the news covers their own, nationally - while nobody heard about this on the same day, same city:http://www.odmp.org/officer.php?oid=18963ahh, who cares - he was 23 and had 2 kids.... news guys sensationalizing something that isn't really "news" is much more importantnow who is it that howls when cops cover their own? could it be that this isnt a "cop thing" but human nature.... but I digress-------------------------------------------------if you are breaking the law, and someone dies as a result of your choices - you own the death, you are a murderer (felony murder rule, 1st degree). If a cop/fireman/paramedic dies responding to the aftermath of your choices, you own that death[Edited on August 4, 2007 at 1:01 AM. Reason : x]
8/4/2007 12:59:49 AM
8/4/2007 10:05:45 AM
8/4/2007 10:29:52 AM
8/4/2007 10:50:47 AM
8/4/2007 11:18:35 AM
8/4/2007 1:15:10 PM
Reasonable expectations must enter into this somewhere. An arsonist must reasonably expect a firefighter to run into the building. A man running from the police must reasonably expect to cause car accidents along the way. But is it reasonable to expect people listening to the chase on the radio or watching from helicopters to stop paying attention, dying in the process? Similarly, is it reasonable to expect a police officer to drive himself into the back of a parked truck? These deaths occured because the criminals indirectly distracted the victims, nothing more, and I do not believe that is grounds for a murder investigation.
8/4/2007 1:48:07 PM
8/4/2007 1:50:44 PM
^^ Agreed actually. In both the instance of the news crews and the cop who was drinking, I don't think that the criminal should be chargd with either of those deaths. It's a matter of what choices the criminal made, the reasonable response expectable and the choices of those who died. But it all need to be dealt with case by case. If the cop who was drinking had not been drinking, then charging the person is reasonable as it's reasonable to expect cops to respond to a crime in comission.
8/4/2007 2:53:04 PM
8/4/2007 11:04:34 PM
which does nothing to address the complete idiocy of the idea.I'm wondering how it will work anyhow when the idea is broached that the felonies in question were caused by unnecessary elevation in hostility
8/5/2007 7:51:13 AM
8/5/2007 2:57:09 PM
thats why there is judicial review to establish probable cause for the offense charged, and a jury to establish 'beyond a reasonable doubt" for conviction.I bold the word "reasonable" because too often the average citizen nowadays seems to think that a conviction requires proof beyond all doubt.this entire thread would be moot if people would just stop victimizing each other
8/5/2007 8:45:22 PM