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midgetcop said:It would probably be those very incompetant government's that would nail your a$$ to the wall for taking the law into your own hands.
Oh...those Canadians should be carefull EH!
midgetcop said:It would probably be those very incompetant government's that would nail your a$$ to the wall for taking the law into your own hands.
Hatchet Man said:The laws regarding self-defence are not that ambiguous. Force can be used as long as it is reasonable under the circumstances. It would be impossible to list every convievable scenario that might arise and the setting out what level of force you can use. Thats why the police (in ontario at least) have the use of force wheel (there is a graphic of it here on this site)
Hatchet Man said:Again you scenario is too vague. Is this woman bigger than you, armed with a weapon, high on drugs? There are a number of factors that are taken into account, not just geneder.
Do you have any specific instances to back up your claims? Have you taken any kind of use of force training? Taken any classes on the laws regarding use of force? Spoken with any police officers about what you can and can not do legally to defend yourself? Once again YOUR statement is the one that is being vague and amibigous, was this unarmed intruder larger than you physically, high on drugs and impervious to pain inflicted through empty hand techniques?
Hatchet Man said:WTF, Occupants cannot be sure of the intentions of an intruder!?! If someone is BREAKING into my house, it is not for tea and biscuits. Only people who are involved in criminal activity would enter another persons home forcefully and illegally. As well for the THIRD flippin time S. 40 and 41 say that I can use FORCE to prevent and/or remove people illegally inside my house. I DO NOT need to know what there INTENT is. If I did not invite them in they are not welcome. It is because of weak-kneed statements like yours "to err on the side of caution" that we are in this mess in the first place. If more and more people started asserting their rights, the prevailing tuck-tail and run attitudes in spite of what the law says we can do, will change.
midgetcop said:I agree morally. When your own system has failed you time and time again, you have to take the matter into your hands.
But I doubt those governments would agree that it's justified. It would probably be those very incompetant government's that would nail your a$$ to the wall for taking the law into your own hands.
NO it isn't. Go pick up a copy of an annotated Criminal Code (you can find them in college/university bookstores), it provides explains the meanings of terms like "reasonableness" and provides case law to illustrate the law in action. Or seeing as how you are a student at U of T take some law classes. As the use of force wheel used by police angencies in Ontario is certainly applicable to civillians (especially since most security companies use it and they are civillians)R0B said:Yes they are. Who decides what "reasonable" means? Not you, not the intruder, and in fact, "reasonableness" isn't decided until after the incident. What is and what is not reasonable has not been laid out as I believe it should.
In this case yes you would be charged, and yeah I would agree with it. If she is unarmed, and passive (ie not acting out wildly), then cracking her in the head right off the bat is excessive. If other passive/less forceful means failed to get her to leave then you can crack her one. There is no one size fits all response, and to try and make one will be fraught with many challenges both in criminal and CIVIL court. You can do what you need to stop a person, but that does not mean always mean automatically jumping to highest level of response in the use of force. Even the military must take into account multiple aspects of a situation before they use can deadly force. And based on your premise that gender/size/mental state shouldn't matter then police can just beat people or shoot them at will.Too vague? Like the Criminal Code of Canada? Allow me to clarify my scenario. She's a foot shorter than I am, and 40 lbs lighter, unarmed, climbing through a window, and maybe smoked a little crank. If I were to crack her skull open with my fist, I would probably be charged with aggravated assault.
The fact that you would even consider the gender, physical size and mental state of the intruder proves exactly what is wrong with the "reasonableness" standard. All that shouldn't matter. If they're breaking in to your house, they're breaking into your house. Do whatever you need to do to stop them.
Well, you can't be sure if their intention is just to steal stuff or to kill you.
But, the Criminal Code says you can use reasonable force, and what is reasonable is not decided until after the incident. What is reasonable certainly doesn't include shooting an intruder, because for one, you're not supposed to have easy access to your firearms. But you don't know if the person is just breaking in to steal your TV, or if they're coming in with a stick of dynamite because a hollowed-out light bulb filled with meth told them you were Satan. Either way, in think in most indictable crimes, the victim is always right, and should be allowed to do whatever they need to do to stop that crime, so long as it doesn't involve crimes against individuals other than the attacker.
R0B said:The citizen's power of arrest means very little without the threat of force a handgun offers.
Hatchet Man said:NO it isn't. Go pick up a copy of an annotated Criminal Code (you can find them in college/university bookstores), it provides explains the meanings of terms like "reasonableness" and provides case law to illustrate the law in action. Or seeing as how you are a student at U of T take some law classes. As the use of force wheel used by police angencies in Ontario is certainly applicable to civillians (especially since most security companies use it and they are civillians)
Hatchet Man said:In this case yes you would be charged, and yeah I would agree with it. If she is unarmed, and passive (ie not acting out wildly), then cracking her in the head right off the bat is excessive. If other passive/less forceful means failed to get her to leave then you can crack her one. There is no one size fits all response, and to try and make one will be fraught with many challenges both in criminal and CIVIL court. You can do what you need to stop a person, but that does not mean always mean automatically jumping to highest level of response in the use of force. Even the military must take into account multiple aspects of a situation before they use can deadly force. And based on your premise that gender/size/mental state shouldn't matter then police can just beat people or shoot them at will.
Hatchet Man said:It doesn't matter if they are going to steal from you or kill you, if the intruder makes you fear for your life, AND they have the means to take your life you can use deadly force. BOTH must be present. As for the firearms, please point out in the Firearms Act or the Criminal Code where it says you can't have easy access to your firearms. You can have easy access and still follow the law (safes with biometric locks come to mind). Some people for various reasons go way beyond what is required of them.
Hatchet Man said:Really? Have any real world experience to back up that absurd claim of yours? I have arrested plenty of people under the citizens arrest provision, and nevery once did I have a handgun.
Hatchet Man said:Really? Have any real world experience to back up that absurd claim of yours? I have arrested plenty of people under the citizens arrest provision, and nevery once did I have a handgun.
R0B said:If "reasonable" has been defined, then why not go ahead and define it here? The Criminal Code has been widely criticized for its uncertainty, namely in using words like "reasonable," "obscene," indecent" etc... and not sticking by any one particular definition. Your "force wheel" might apply to the police, but I'm not a peace officer. If I were to shoot someone with a handgun even if they were in my home, threatening grievous bodily harm or death with a firearm, I would almost certainly be charged. In fact, I'd be willing to bet that I would in fact be charged. I might be able to get off on a plea of necessity, but that's about it.
I'm not talking about the police, so don't prejudice this argument with your police studies education, I'm talking about civilians. If someone is breaking into my house, their physical and mental characteristics should not matter. What should matter, on the other hand, is that fact that someone is forcibly intruding into my residence, and thus my life, the lives of the other occupants, and the sanctity of my private property are all in jeopardy. I haven't been training in using a minimal amount of force to subjugate a perpetrator, so it should only be reasonable that I, or anyone else in my position, be allowed to use any amount of force felt to be necessary.
Fear for your life isn't enough, it needs to be "reasonable," and your reasonableness is not decided until the trial.
I am aware of the firearms regs, and nowhere does it say the you can't get access to your weapons quickly. You just have to make sure no else can get to them quickly and easily. A gun safe with a biometric lock does exactly that. The guns and ammo are not readily accessible to others because they are in a safe (which is in location that only I know of that no one else would see), with a lock that can't be picked (easily) unless you have my thumb.Firearms storage isn't mentioned in the criminal code. However, take a look at section 5.(1 c) of the Firearms Act. It reads as follows:
An individual may store a non-restricted firearm only if it is not readily accessible to ammunition, unless the ammunition is stored, together with or separately from the firearm, in a container or receptacle that is kept securely locked and that is constructed so that it cannot readily be broken open or into.
And of course, that's a non-restricted firearm; it only gets worse for restricted and prohibited weapons. The CFO of Ontario suggested the reasoning for this was that individuals could not reach their firearms in the heat of passion.
People obey because they have been taught from childhood to obey, they obey because most people know bad things will happen if they don't. They obey because they understand they are only doing there job. It is not necessarily because they fear them. As for the second part, I have, as well as in Regent Park, Parkdale, Moss Park, Cabbagetown, Scarborough. Not everyone in these areas is a gun toting banger, and even they comply on occasion without the threat of force. Anymore smartas s comments?Why do you think people obey the police? People obey the police because they fear them. Try your citizen's arrest in Jane/Finch and see how that goes. Unless your victim is physically subdued, good luck with a citizen's arrest.
But the police also have large and power Associations to back up their members. I put up the use of force wheel, as it illustrates what is appropriate force in different situations, as the police are still subjects to the same laws as civillians regarding excessive force. It is a reference guide only not a hard and fast way of doing things. If more civillians followed this model (not just private security) they would be less likely to find themselves being charged with assault etc. while they were rightfully defending themselves/home/others.TCBF said:" As the use of force wheel used by police angencies "
CAUTION: The use of force wheel is necessitated by various provincial Police Acts. These are notorious pieces of legislation which largely hobble the police in many of their responses. You, as a citizen in your home, do NOT have your hands tied by the police act. The Magna Carta (a mam's home is his castle) and 1500 years of common law back you up.
Most police will tell you about restrictions based on their realities - not yours. They operate under the odious Police Act - you don't.
As suggested above - read the case law.
Tom
TCBF said:"If more civillians followed this model (not just private security) they would be less likely to find themselves being charged with assault etc. while they were rightfully defending themselves/home/others."
More likely to find themselves dead. Police acts assume well trained and equiped police with lethal force at their hip and back-up. Individuals cannot carry, and so the initial physical contact must be enough by itself to stop the offence and prevent it's continuation. Escallation of force for police assumes access to deadly force - a gun - if needed, so they can afford to take risks - you can't.
Tom
No they designed these so they don't get charged with excessive force, and open themselves up to civil litigation. There is nothing that prevents civys from using these models for the same reasons, as the Criminal Code provisions for using excessive force are the SAME!! Regardless of whether you wear a badge or not. As I have said civillians (private security) already use these to keep their asses out of a sling. It is also useful because officers will judge whether YOU used excessive force based on THIER training and knowledge (which includes these wheels). I am not saying it is right, but that is what will happen, so better that you as a civy know how you are going to be judged.TCBF said:"? This is not part of the police services act (in Ontario). ¦nbsp; Civillians use this wheel (the National use of Force wheel is located here http://policechiefmagazine.org/magazine/issues/102004/PDFS/page132_fig3.pdf it does not say firearm, merely lethal force)all the time, they.."
It clearly states " The National Use of Force Framework For Police Officers in Canada" Ya gotta read your own refs now and then. Unless you are suggesting the police designed that wheel for us to follow. Nice of them. Call 9-1-1 and die...
MY use of force wheel sees an old lady - all 88 pounds of her - shooting a puke in her house with her dead huusbands unregistered Luger. I see no need for her to consult a wheel and wrestle with her 237 pound meth-head attacker.
Go ahead, lock her up...
Tom
TCBF said:By all means, other people may paint themselves into a corner if they wish, but they should not force their personal artificial restraints on others.
" The reason for posting these wheels, is to give an illustration of what is "reasonable" force under the criminal code. "
....regarding police and SGs at WORK, not Larry Lunchbox and Suzy Sewingkit at HOME.
and Section 27Every one who is authorized by law to use force is criminally responsible for any excess thereof according to the nature and quality of the act that constitutes the excess.
These Sections make no distinction between Officer Bob at work, or Grandma Betty at home. Sec 25 below also says27. Every one is justified in using as much force as is reasonably necessary
(a) to prevent the commission of an offence
(i) for which, if it were committed, the person who committed it might be arrested without warrant, and
(ii) that would be likely to cause immediate and serious injury to the person or property of anyone; or
(b) to prevent anything being done that, on reasonable grounds, he believes would, if it were done, be an offence mentioned in paragraph (a).
(1) Every one who is required or authorized by law to do anything in the administration or enforcement of the law
(a) as a private person,
(b) as a peace officer or public officer,
(c) in aid of a peace officer or public officer, or
(d) by virtue of his office,
is, if he acts on reasonable grounds, justified in doing what he is required or authorized to do and in using as much force as is necessary for that purpose.
(3) Subject to subsections (4) and (5), a person is not justified for the purposes of subsection (1) in using force that is intended or is likely to cause death or grievous bodily harm unless the person believes on reasonable grounds that it is necessary for the self-preservation of the person or the preservation of any one under that person's protection from death or grievous bodily harm.
Hatchet Man said:I will concede that reasonable is hard to define as it is a subjective term. However that is more likely than not a good thing, as rigid defintions when used in the context of what is/is not excessive force would provide people little recourse if they found themselves at the short end of the stick. Basically it boils down to common sense (which judging by you seems to be in short supply). Was it designed by the police, yes it was but that does not preclude ordinary civillians from using it determine what is "reasonable" force in any given situation. In fact most if not all private security firms use it for thier employees (who are civilians by the way, not peace officers). Until you actually shoot someone in self-defence, how do you know for sure the police will charge you? They may well in fact decide what you did was reasonable and justifiable and say good job. As oft been said in this thread better Tried by 12 then carried by 6.
Hatchet Man said:Ever heard the saying the police are the public and the public are the police? Any discussion about the police and use of force is absolutely relevant to discussions as it relates to civilians. They are subject to the same laws as us when it comes to using force/excessive force, the only difference is they get to use force in few more situations than civillians. And as they use force in a multitude of situations on a daily basis anything they come up with to help decide what is reasonable force (like the use of force wheel) is absolutely useful to civillians as well. Knowledge is power. But it would seem you do not want seek knowledge that will save your butt in a situation like the ones posed. Whether you like it or not the physical and mental characteristics of a perpatrator factor into whether the force used to subdue them was justifiable. Quit your gripping and deal with it. If you really don't like it write your MP and petition them to change the law instead of bitchin how much you think the law should conform to your views.
Hatchet Man said:I already said fear of you life isn't enough, read more thoroughly. And once again if the police decide your actions were reasonable given the circumstances you won't be proceeding to trail. They make the first decision.
Hatchet Man said:I am aware of the firearms regs, and nowhere does it say the you can't get access to your weapons quickly. You just have to make sure no else can get to them quickly and easily. A gun safe with a biometric lock does exactly that. The guns and ammo are not readily accessible to others because they are in a safe (which is in location that only I know of that no one else would see), with a lock that can't be picked (easily) unless you have my thumb.
Hatchet Man said:People obey because they have been taught from childhood to obey, they obey because most people know bad things will happen if they don't. They obey because they understand they are only doing there job. It is not necessarily because they fear them. As for the second part, I have, as well as in Regent Park, Parkdale, Moss Park, Cabbagetown, Scarborough. Not everyone in these areas is a gun toting banger, and even they comply on occasion without the threat of force. Anymore smartas s comments?