There really are magic words. "You are under citizens arrest, lie face down on the ground and await police, or I will use force to restrain you" If I then have to kneecap the little puke, I am affecting a citizens arrest, using non lethal force to restrain a criminal who I remand into custody when police amble on scene. "Come back here you little sh*t" as I kneecap the slack and idle piece of thieving civilian excrement, and I am remanded into custody for assault with a deadly weapon. The words are important, they separate the legal intent to restrain a criminal in lawful support of police, and the criminal act of retaliatory violence. The law is not your friend, the law is a tool. Tools don't care who uses them. If it works for the criminal (arguably the laziest and stupidest members of our glorious society), then how much better will it serve those of us who actually evolved enough to use tools effectively?Infanteer said:Never chased the guy down the street - chased him out of the store. They then smashed the windows out in his car as he got away.
My bone of contention is that the police were implying that the criminal was defending himself now that the storeowner and his son were swinging - isn't this the reason that he assumed his posture? Do the authorities know if the citizens let down their "fight" instinct, the guy won't comeback with his knife and stab someone?
By pulling the knife on someone, the guy was fair game to be incapacitated with a bat - correct me if I'm wrong, but I remember being told (by a cop) that police have a shoot-to-kill policy with guys wielding knives once they get to within a certain distance.
1. To have a CCW in the state of Florida you must be a resident...Not a citizen of the United States. I know of Canadians who have them.
35. Every one who has without justification assaulted another but did not commence the assault with intent to cause death or grievous bodily harm, or has without justification provoked an assault on himself by another, may justify the use of force subsequent to the assault if
(a) he uses the force
(i) under reasonable apprehension of death or grievous bodily harm from the violence of the person whom he has assaulted or provoked, and
(ii) in the belief, on reasonable grounds, that it is necessary in order to preserve himself from death or grievous bodily harm;
( b) he did not, at any time before the necessity of preserving himself from death or grievous bodily harm arose, endeavour to cause death or grievous bodily harm; and
(c) he declined further conflict and quitted or retreated from it as far as it was feasible to do so before the necessity of preserving himself from death or grievous bodily harm arose.
rw4th said:I wonder how this is actually applied by the courts though.