News1 min ago
Ken Clarke say we can stab a burglar under the proposed new law:
35 Answers
http://news.sky.com/s...t_Fear_Of_Prosecution
What effect will this have? Will we seen burglars going "tooled up"? Will the front pages be full of the latest dead burglar every week?
What effect will this have? Will we seen burglars going "tooled up"? Will the front pages be full of the latest dead burglar every week?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by CanisMajor. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Not quite sure about what's actually being proposed through the hype.
We know that you can use reasonable force - nothing new there.
There seems to be a phrase "whatever force is necessary"
That doesn't sound the same to me -not a clarification -are they suggesting this will be a new test?
Or is this the same law brushed and polished up?
Is anything actually changing?
We know that you can use reasonable force - nothing new there.
There seems to be a phrase "whatever force is necessary"
That doesn't sound the same to me -not a clarification -are they suggesting this will be a new test?
Or is this the same law brushed and polished up?
Is anything actually changing?
Well, He's claiming to clarify:
Speaking to the BBC, Mr Clarke said: "We will make it quite clear you can hit a burglar with a poker if he's in your house and you have a perfect defence when you do so.
"If an old lady finds she's got an 18-year-old burgling her house and she picks up a kitchen knife and sticks it in him, she has not committed a criminal offence, and we will make that clear."
up to now you have always been able to use "reasonable force" but that has always been vapourous in it's definition, now it seems that attacking a burglar will be ok and they even give the examples above. I don;t think anything on this is tha past has ever said it's "ok to ......" - ie giving examples of offence that is allowed, regardless, it seems of any self defence aspect.
Are they saying that if I go out and buy a cricket bat solely for hiting burglars and I actually hit one I'll not be prosecuted even if I'm not actually a cricketer?
All a bit "up in the air" at the moment!
Speaking to the BBC, Mr Clarke said: "We will make it quite clear you can hit a burglar with a poker if he's in your house and you have a perfect defence when you do so.
"If an old lady finds she's got an 18-year-old burgling her house and she picks up a kitchen knife and sticks it in him, she has not committed a criminal offence, and we will make that clear."
up to now you have always been able to use "reasonable force" but that has always been vapourous in it's definition, now it seems that attacking a burglar will be ok and they even give the examples above. I don;t think anything on this is tha past has ever said it's "ok to ......" - ie giving examples of offence that is allowed, regardless, it seems of any self defence aspect.
Are they saying that if I go out and buy a cricket bat solely for hiting burglars and I actually hit one I'll not be prosecuted even if I'm not actually a cricketer?
All a bit "up in the air" at the moment!
-- answer removed --
I don't think it's nebulous at all. It's pretty clear.
You're in a threatening situation you can use force in proportion to the threat.
There's a burglar in your house you can hit him with a Poker
You can't hit him with a poker leave him bleeding on the ground and then run of to the kitchin for a nice large knife to finish the job off!!
And you certainly can't shoot him in the back with an illegal firearm as he's legging it down your back garden trying to get away!
This sounds to me to be a desperate attempt to play at being "tough on crime" whilst actually doing nothing whatsoever.
You're in a threatening situation you can use force in proportion to the threat.
There's a burglar in your house you can hit him with a Poker
You can't hit him with a poker leave him bleeding on the ground and then run of to the kitchin for a nice large knife to finish the job off!!
And you certainly can't shoot him in the back with an illegal firearm as he's legging it down your back garden trying to get away!
This sounds to me to be a desperate attempt to play at being "tough on crime" whilst actually doing nothing whatsoever.
-- answer removed --
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