RE: Pregnant Alabama Woman who was shot charged with Manslaughter of her unborn baby
July 3, 2019 at 10:09 am
Thanks for the links Athene. I'm sure some might feel the urge to support or contribute and that's helpful.
And despite your opinion, in Alabama, a fetus is a baby.
The law is pretty clear. The shooter is not always to blame for the death of a shooting. Sometimes it's accidental, sometimes it's self defense. Often an escalation of force matrix is applied for those that are trained. For the average Joe Blow Schmoe though, if you're pulling out your gun to shoot someone, someone should be in danger. You are conflating which laws apply to which cases and when. There are many states with child access prevention laws, Alabama isn't one (https://lawcenter.giffords.org/gun-laws/...revention/). There are parent charged and convicted for leaving guns available for kids. This isn't the case here.
It was felony battery while endangering the welfare of a child that ended in self defense and an accidental death. The grand jury charged her but it might still be dismissed as it's not a popular thing. What I hear from the opposite side is the intimation that Ms. Jones is the victim. She's not, she's the aggressor and the reason for her situation, I'm 95% of the time for personal accountability.
If you disagree with Ms. Jones being charged:
1. Do you believe she was primarily responsible for the situation?
2. Do you believe she should be punished?
(July 2, 2019 at 11:52 am)Aoi Magi Wrote:If I instigated the fight and could reasonably forsee the danger to my child, and if you shot my child without intention then yes.(July 2, 2019 at 10:43 am)tackattack Wrote: That's why I used the example of instead of a fetus, it was a child bystander. So I'll ask it plainly again Can you honestly say that the victim of an accidental death in a drive-by shouldn't have the shooter punished?So if we had an argument and you tried to hit me, and I shoot your child, I should go scot-free, and you should be charged with manslaughter?
And despite your opinion, in Alabama, a fetus is a baby.
(July 2, 2019 at 12:08 pm)LastPoet Wrote: Its weird like that magi... It is twisted the love of guns. Sure if the woman was shooting a gun, I would find perfectly reasonable to use a gun to bring her down, but she was unarmed and pregnant. I don't think of pregnant women as masters of krav maga, so it is easy to dodge any blow, while making a call to the cops.I don't know anyone who knows me to say that I love guns. I'm actually very anti-gun. YOU may successfully dodge the lady, but the article I read was the gun was pulled after she had taken blows and was backed against a car taking a continued beating. She obviously couldn't defend against it. I don't normally defend gun owners but in this case I believe the grand jury was correct to dismiss the charges.
Excessive use of force is the legal lango here. Even cops have to abide by that.
(July 2, 2019 at 12:50 pm)Cecelia Wrote:The shooter was charged. The charges were dismissed by a jury. Listen, you can straw man all day, but here's my honest opinion. I don't think Ms. Jones needs to go to jail for 20 years for instigating someone to accidentally shoot her child. I believe she should be punished for reckless endangerment involving the death of a child. I believe irresponsible gun owners should also be punished. I do not believe the gun owner in this case was irresponsible or reckless, one shot center mass is pretty below standard (usually it's two).(July 2, 2019 at 10:43 am)tackattack Wrote: That's why I used the example of instead of a fetus, it was a child bystander. So I'll ask it plainly again Can you honestly say that the victim of an accidental death in a drive-by shouldn't have the shooter punished?
According to you, if it was in 'self defense', then the answer is 'no' apparently.
If someone shoots someone, the person doing the shooting should be the one charged. This woman didn't take her gun out, shoot at someone then accidentally hit herself in the stomach.
But you'll pivot back to 'self defense' laws, ignoring that by these same laws a father who leaves his gun out and his son gets a hold of it and kills his daughter with it, doesn't get charged. After which you'll pivot back to what YOUR opinion on the matter is, rather than what the law is.
The law is pretty clear. The shooter is not always to blame for the death of a shooting. Sometimes it's accidental, sometimes it's self defense. Often an escalation of force matrix is applied for those that are trained. For the average Joe Blow Schmoe though, if you're pulling out your gun to shoot someone, someone should be in danger. You are conflating which laws apply to which cases and when. There are many states with child access prevention laws, Alabama isn't one (https://lawcenter.giffords.org/gun-laws/...revention/). There are parent charged and convicted for leaving guns available for kids. This isn't the case here.
It was felony battery while endangering the welfare of a child that ended in self defense and an accidental death. The grand jury charged her but it might still be dismissed as it's not a popular thing. What I hear from the opposite side is the intimation that Ms. Jones is the victim. She's not, she's the aggressor and the reason for her situation, I'm 95% of the time for personal accountability.
If you disagree with Ms. Jones being charged:
1. Do you believe she was primarily responsible for the situation?
2. Do you believe she should be punished?
"There ought to be a term that would designate those who actually follow the teachings of Jesus, since the word 'Christian' has been largely divorced from those teachings, and so polluted by fundamentalists that it has come to connote their polar opposite: intolerance, vindictive hatred, and bigotry." -- Philip Stater, Huffington Post
always working on cleaning my windows- me regarding Johari
always working on cleaning my windows- me regarding Johari