- Joined
- May 21, 2013
- Messages
- 19,673
- Reaction score
- 151,921
I'm not sure I can tell what might be faint flickers of light from the pixelation in the dark video. Are the lights any of you seeing directly in the same location as the rear vehicle?
Thank you for the detailed, civilized reply Wollander77.I was curious about the scenario you presented and looked up whether or not a case such as this occurred in the past. And I found a case similar to the situation you imagined. Links: https://www.sootoday.com/local-news/19-year-old-says-not-a-drop-since-car-jacking-181388 and http://www.saultstar.com/2015/06/23/carjacking-nets-house-arrest.
Last year, 19 year-old Nicholas Burns was convicted of forcible confinement, assault, and two other counts for having threatened a woman in her car with bodily harm while drunk in Sault Ste. Marie:
"Burns got into her car and demanded she drive him home. Once in the car he started to touch her arm, and was told to stop. When she tried to get him to leave, Burns yelled at her, and said he didnt trust her. He then said that he would smash her head against the wheel and pulled her hair, Crown prosecutor Mary Pascuzzi said. Burns then told the victim to get out of the vehicle. She ran away and called the police."
Granted, in this case, Burns ordered the woman to drive him home, told her to leave the car when she wouldn't, and had voluntarily pleaded guilty to all charges. Even so, he acknowledged the conviction and served his sentence (because he was truly remorseful, thought he would lose the case, or wanted to lessen his sentence). So while the jury in the TB case may rule differently, there have been unique circumstances such as I've described here that urged the Crown to confidently pursue the forcible confinement charge and actually secure it.
But again, perhaps we'll never know what happened in TB's truck and the jury will have to determine the most accurate interpretation of events as they see it. I'm not sure which explanation might offer the Bosma family better closure, and my heart goes out to them in this regard.
On a final note, I didn't sense that sleuths here thought forcible confinement was a given, only that they were persuaded one way or the other with the evidence they've reviewed. I believe the Crown will still have to prove its case before the jury, as I think they've tried their best to do. But we've still more to hear from them and I want to see how they'll proceed from here.
I'm not sure I can tell what might be faint flickers of light from the pixelation in the dark video. Are the lights any of you seeing directly in the same location as the rear vehicle?
That was a hypothetic scenario of a criminal interaction, <modsnip> but thanks anyway.<rsbm>
IMO (no learned judge here), Yes it would be forcible confinement. Firstly, in Canada, we don't just pull guns on people to get them to do as we please (you should call LE to have the person legally removed). That aside, once you pull the gun on me, that is an "exhibition of force". I would therefore be under "duress" because you are using the "threat of force". IF that does in fact constitute FC, it does not matter that the gun went off accidentally .. I died during the commission of FC.
IMO, you would be hard pressed to convince a judge/jury that you had no intention to use the gun (mens rea). Why not just come at me with a slipper and slap me until I left ... alive but with a bruised ego?
I'm not sure I can tell what might be faint flickers of light from the pixelation in the dark video. Are the lights any of you seeing directly in the same location as the rear vehicle?
I'm not sure the lights matter that much to me - two vehicles pull off the road, don't put on their flashers or interior lights - the drivers wouldn't have been just sitting in their vehicles in the pitch dark the whole ten minutes.
Maybe they meant a cigarette lighter.I don't think the smaller lights are from a cigarette. Maybe a flashlight? Very short moments of light. That whole thing is so weird and disturbing.
Do ya think <modsnip>!!!
Maybe they meant a cigarette lighter.
I think the Vancouver case is a perfect example that the confinement aspect isn't as black and white as some people think. The accused was first convicted on 1st degree murder based on the finding that the victim was unlawfully confined in his apartment when he was killed. He then won his appeal and the conviction was downgraded to 2nd degree on the basis that the evidence did not support that the victim was confined as a separate act from the murder. The Crown then appealed to the Supreme Court and the 1st degree conviction was reinstated on the basis that "it was open to the trial judge to conclude that the act of forcible or unlawful confinement, which occurred when the respondent prevented the victim from escaping through the front door of the apartment, was distinct and independent" from the murder. Interesting that the original trial was by judge alone, not by jury. Judging by the witness accounts, I would agree that the 1st degree conviction was the correct one in that case.
http://blogs.vancouversun.com/2016/02/26/un-gangster-has-first-degree-murder-conviction-re-instated/
It would seem from this that the confinement does have to be a separate act, distinct and independent from the murder, for a 1st degree charge to apply. In this case, the Judge will give the Jury instructions on the legal definitions of 1st degree and confinement, and it will be up to the Jury to decide guilt of 1st degree murder or a lesser charge. I think it could help the Jury in their decision if they had some evidence of what it was that actually happened just prior to the death. As for the other examples given, I think there is a very large difference between being killed while one is trying to leave the situation and as a means of preventing one from leaving, and being killed accidentally or during a struggle while one is being told to leave. The first instance would be 1st degree, the second would be 2nd degree or manslaughter.
JMO
Unfortunately, as you already pointed out, these are in fact 2 very different scenarios, in regard to forcible confinement IMO, for the reasons you mentioned.
I had assumed they exited at Oak Park too until the Bobcat video. I suppose the Paris Rd exit is DMs usual route to Roseville but kind of stupid with a body in the vehicle because he had to drive right through downtown Paris. Rest Acres would have been more direct via Trussler Rd......unless TB was meant to survive until they reached Roseville? I wonder why no videos from downtown Paris?Would somebody please help me with my bearings here?
Are those vehicles driving south on Oak Park - stop - then turn around and head back north?
I always assumed that they exited the 403 at Oak Park and went in a northerly direction. If they're driving south then they exited maybe at Paris Rd and drove into the outer part of Paris, and then turned onto Oak Park which is really odd. Why turn south and then have turn around. Lost?
To get to the farm, go north on Oak Park and then eventually make your way up through Cambridge or dipsy doodle through Paris and out to 15 and up.
Do we know the actual route they took to the farm?
Sorry for these questions. I had a different scenario in my head and now I realize I was wrong. Thanks
Sooooo, if you steal a truck with the owner in the front seat you should be no less guilty of abduction.
I had assumed they exited at Oak Park too until the Bobcat video. I suppose the Paris Rd exit is DMs usual route to Roseville but kind of stupid with a body in the vehicle because he had to drive right through downtown Paris. Rest Acres would have been more direct via Trussler Rd......unless TB was meant to survive until they reached Roseville? I wonder why no videos from downtown Paris?
It appears they took a detour south on Oak Park, then turned back north to Paris Rd.
I wonder why no videos from downtown Paris?
Would they be using the light from a cell phone for brief moments of light?
Gang initiation might sound a little far-fetched, but that's the scenario I keep going back to.