No charges? Can anyone see this possiblity in a few years?
"Come'on, Prinicpal Skinner, Chief Wiggams, this time I just knocked the girl unconscious, blacked her eyes, broke her arm, and ruptured her spleen, and smashed her front teeth.
I didn't even kill anybody this time. Let me go home now."
Cd happen in two minutes, whether the other girl agreed to fight or not.
Media reports this was not spontaneous or spur of the moment.
It was not accidental, like a kid losing control of her bike and somehow landing on top of a pedestrian,
somehow kneeing her, resulting in her death.
If that had bn the situation, easier to understand no charges.
Here, both girls planned and agreed to fight at later time. And did.
Is the now-dead girl's agreement to future fight, her "consent" to be hit?
Maybe.
Does her agreement to fight, her showing up for the fight, and participating in the fight, then excuse her actions from criminal law or juvie consequences?
Maybe not, but st. can't bring charges -- she's dead, the ultimate punishment/consequence for being involved in assault & battery (the very actions she planned, agreed to).
One of the reasons crim/juvie law has consequences for planned fights (assault & battery) is ----
deter people from planning and participating such fights (A & B).
One reason for crim/juvie law re fights (A & B) is because they can --- result in serious injury or death. Precisely what happened here.
DETERRENCE?
Would crim/juvie charges against thekiller deter her from planning & participating in future fights?
I think so, at least deter her more than not charging her.
Would crim/juvie charges against the killer deter others from planning & participating in future fights?
I think so, at least deter others more than not charging her.
"I'm not gonna fight. Holy cow, look what happened to Jane Doe."
Not going to deter everybody, just some people.
Others posted that the girl will live the rest of her life, knowing that she killed another person, that she will suffer,
so criminal-juvie law procedures are not approp. or needed.
Maybe so.
I think, people w. a conscience wd suffer for the rest of their lives from being involved in a fight like this, resulting in a death.
Fact: she knows she planned to fight, did so, landing at least one brutal blow,
which resulted in another person's death, and suffers no crim/juvie law effects.
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Rather than seeing the state's no-charge decision as an act of mercy, one time-only-forgiveness,
is it possible that this girl sees it as license to continue the same behaviors and actions that resulted in the death of another person? Perhaps encouragement.
Some people - even 11 y/o's - could see it that way.
Maybe the state gathered plenty of info about this 11 y/o, her family, friends, school, etc. and concluded this girl would suffer with knowledge that she killed someone, and based the no-charge decision on that.
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On W/S we see people who have killed others and do not suffer so much as a twinge of guilt about it, until the crim-juvie law catches up with them. Even then, sometimes their only remorse is in getting caught, charged & convicted, not in having committed their criminal acts.