el diablo
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« Reply #15 on: May 14, 2013, 02:47:25 pm » |
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^^^ When self defense is in play we do and should. At what point does an offender become a victim in a case like this and vice versa? That is what has to be determined.
If a whore dies during a rape, do we excuse the rape because she's a whore? No. That's why we don't (shouldn't) put victims on trial. "They had it coming" is not an excuse for a crime.
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MyGodWearsAHoodie
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« Reply #16 on: May 14, 2013, 02:59:21 pm » |
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If a whore dies during a rape, do we excuse the rape because she's a whore? No. That's why we don't (shouldn't) put victims on trial. "They had it coming" is not an excuse for a crime.
That is quite a bit different. If the defendant's defense is he was acting in self-defense, than the conduct of the victim is highly relevant. If a an LSD addict trips out and enters your house by accident at night thinking it is his own and you shoot him thinking he is a burglar: Do we excuse the murder because the victim a worthless druggy? NO! We excuse the crime b/c you were acting in self defense. The question in this case is did Martin act in such a matter on that day as to place Zimmerman to make Zimmerman reasonable apprehension of serious harm. To that extent Martin's conduct is on trial. Whether Martin smoked dope at some point in his life, however, is not relevant to answering that question.
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MyGodWearsAHoodie
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« Reply #19 on: May 14, 2013, 03:35:31 pm » |
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Well you really went to the extreme there. My example was meant to mean more like, what if she specialized in role play of the act of rape and was accidentally choked for too long. Is someone still responsible for her death, well yes. Was it planned, not really.
I really don't think this is even quite on par with what I meant but I wanted to stay with your example.
The best way to really get what I mean is not take it out of context anyway. I specifically said when self defense is in play and you either glanced over that or ignored it.
My example was meant to mean more like, what if she specialized in role play of the act of rape and was accidentally choked for too long. Is someone still responsible for her death, well yes. Was it planned, not really.
Actually on those facts it would not be murder. Either manslaughter or negligent homicide. So yes, if the victim consented to be choked and the victim specialized in role playing rape and choking, that would be highly relevant.
The best way to really get what I mean is not take it out of context anyway. I specifically said when self defense is in play and you either glanced over that or ignored it.
I missed that part. But than what you said is irrelevant to the discussion because self defense is in play.
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« Last Edit: May 14, 2013, 04:16:05 pm by MyGodWearsAHoodie »
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There are two rules for success: 1. Never tell everything you know.
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el diablo
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« Reply #21 on: May 14, 2013, 04:55:56 pm » |
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Yes, my "whore" analogy was extreme. To prove a point. Trayvon was shown to have traces of THC in his system (according to toxicology reports). So how are his school records relevant? They're not. I'm also biased in believing that marijuana use doesn't make one violent. The young man had traces, which doesn't even prove he used that night. So how is his alleged marijuana use relevant? Its not. Just like the fake gold teeth argument. Now, I will agree that marijuana may make you paranoid. But why would a young man have a reason to be paranoid on a Sunday evening in a private neighborhood? Maybe someone following him may have had something to do with that?
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