What planet are you from?
Is that a rhetorical question? Please elaborate.
What planet are you from?
While I can see some logic in it you'd better be prepared to build many more jails and spend lots of money that may well be put to other uses. I think any entrapment should be limited to drug importers and peddlers!
I think any means that gets criminals caught, charged and convicted should be legal as long as the criminal is guilty. That doesn't apply if evidence is planted against him, but entrapment is nothing more than inviting the criminal to expose his illegal activity.
Yes, along with him. He'll have broken the law too, no?
So with that in mind, unless the cop wants to go in the slammer with me, he might want to think twice about entrapping me. But yes, if I break the law, then I made my choice, no?
That's a separate matter. He did not know he was trespassing and stealing property. In such a case, the cop should be thrown in the slammer. When I think of using entrapment as an excuse, I'm thinking in terms of intentionally breaking the law.
No doubt about it. I don't trust the cops with any burden of proof below guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
I am talking here of a clear breaking of the law.
In principle though, the cop knows he risks going to jail for entrapping me, he probably won't entrap me and that makes it a moot point.
The intent here is that should the cop still be stupid enough to entrap me and I willingly break the law knowing I am breaking it, then entrapment should not be an excuse. The cop and I should be cell mates in that case.
I agree there should be tougher laws against entrapment in the first place no doubt.
I totally agree but known pedos are never charged if they are rich and in places of authority. The RCC Clergy would be the most noted but but it certainly doesn't stop there.. . . in other words those who are a threat to the safety of people, particularly children and the ones who can't fend for themselves.
I think any means that gets criminals caught, charged and convicted should be legal as long as the criminal is guilty. That doesn't apply if evidence is planted against him, but entrapment is nothing more than inviting the criminal to expose his illegal activity.
The law has gone much too soft on criminals and has put police in the impossible situation of responsibility to enforce the law without the means to do so.
I'm thinking of a case some years ago when a motorist was stopped for a traffic violation and the officer discovered a large amount of illegal drugs in the car. The case was thrown out of court because the officer did not have a warrant to 'search the vehicle' at the time of the arrest.
I think that was a clear cut case of 'getting away with murder'!
As for building more prisons, that is another story. Our prisons have been let go to wreck and ruin and have not been increased to accommodate a rapidly growing population. It is only common sense that as population increases, so will the rate of crime.
It doesn't seem right that convicted criminals are being released because of overcrowding in jails.
The law has become an old dog with no teeth.
The problem is that cops will lie even under oath to protect each other. While someone with money could hire a lawyer to prove entrapment Joe Schmuck with a public Defender has no hope of avoiding jail or proving the cop lied.
I recall the case you cite or one very similar to it. My take on the subject is slightly different than yours. High security prisons are very necessary for the likes of Travis Vader, Willy Pickton and Paul Bernardo, not to exclude child molesters and drug importers - in other words those who are a threat to the safety of people, particularly children and the ones who can't fend for themselves. I think we have to concentrate on getting the worst of the worst cleaned up first. For those bastards entrapment is a good tool. I'm of two minds about these Creep Catchers. We'll have to watch how their 'catch' fares in the courts.
'Failed suicide' comes to mind.
Help me out here. What crime is not a threat to the safety of people?
No doubt they are the ones most aware of that. Time to contemplate what went wrong when you are just too messed up to unplug your life support device. Man that would suck. (in that I don't think any attempt results in a person being healthier)That is the definition of a loser.
You really believe that shyte?All I can say is it must be happy in your world.
The problem is that cops will lie even under oath to protect each other. While someone with money could hire a lawyer to prove entrapment Joe Schmuck with a public Defender has no hope of avoiding jail or proving the cop lied.
There you have an example where the cop could have faced the appropriate punitive action for searching without a warrant (trespassing perhaps) but the proof that the cop should collect should still be used against the person in whose possession the drugs were.
Another example. The police search a house without a warrant and find a bunch of stolen jewellery. Of course the cops should be punished for trespassing, no doubt. And of course the owner of the house should be protected by the presumption of innocence. Did the police plant the jewellery? Did the owner know the jewellery was stolen? Did a friend of the owner's bring the jewellery over to his place and left it there without the owner's knowledge? Etc. You get the point.
Another example. I'm a burglar, I break into a house, find a dead body, and call the police. Now, of course I should be found guilty of burglary, but would we excuse the murderer because a burglar trespassing onto his property found the body?
I'm reminded of another case a while back; a hapless family were awakened in the middle of the night by a dynamic entry and held at gunpoint by the ETF, or whatever name they went by, (I think it was in Ontario but I don't know if it was Toronto). The ETF proceeded to search the home while still holding the family on the floor, still at gunpoint. Only after they discovered an old hunting rifle did they realize they entered the wrong address. Nonetheless they charged the homeowner with possession of an unregistered firearm, (the registry was still in effect at the time) and unlawful storage. Though the police were supposedly acting in good faith their navigation/orientation skills were sorely lacking, (they had the right house number, wrong street) and the search and seizure was eventually ruled illegal and any and all evidence was ruled inadmissible. The charges were eventually dismissed. I never did hear if the homeowner got the rifle back though.
The problem is that cops will lie even under oath to protect each other. While someone with money could hire a lawyer to prove entrapment Joe Schmuck with a public Defender has no hope of avoiding jail or proving the cop lied.
We sure saw that in the Dziekanski case didn't we?
I'd read two police reports containing what appeared to be false statements but because of the poor English, it was difficult to tell if they were lying or just used the wrong words and phrases. I kid you not, the English was that bad and that was in English Canada!