Matic
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2014
- Messages
- 409
- Reaction score
- 1,312
Email notifications.What happens in the first few feet of your property?
Email notifications.What happens in the first few feet of your property?
So threatening to kill someone is a no no, but actually killing someone is ok? Because there seems to be a fair amount of borderline excuses and blaming the victim on this thread.
ok, this is MOO but I've been following this case from the first week's posts and was blindsided by today's vitriol. Holy cow I was only away from this thread for a day and a half and already it feels like it has whipsawed from extreme victim-blaming (TY to mods for fixing that) to the start of the new thread being a guns right argument that's generalized, and not related to the folks who have been arrested (sorry I have no idea if mods have addressed that yet). WTF people?!
Matic, thank you for speaking out as you have.
I come in here to catch up on what the heck is happening to poor AA's case and all of a sudden the tones of the thread make me feel like I am part of the problem because I live in a rural area and have 3 "unregistered, not state tracked" guns (a WW2 rifle, and Korean/Vietnam era rifle, and a handgun) that I inherited last year from my 83+-year-old dad who lived with my husband and me. My dad owned those guns LEGALLY for 50+ years here in FL. It was legal for him to own them without centralized registration. They never left his house. Concealed carry (even open carry) was not applicable to how my father handled those guns. When he aged and moved in with us, we bought a gun safe, and those arms were secured in the safe. When he died 2 years ago, I inherited them but they remain in that safe, untouched. I am in Florida but gun laws in GA are not too far off from FL's. I do firmly believe that if AA's shooter had a hand gun stolen from his unlocked truck in January, that he should be accountable for that negligence., and that he is probably a negligent dumbass.
However, that is not a condition that I see as simply fixed by an "anyone who doesn't register their guns is a criminal" type mandate. Again, MOO. I think poor AA was a victim of excessive force for an unjustified "citizens arrest" but that alone does not make every gun owner a felon or miscreant. Please stop insinuating as much.
ok, this is MOO but I've been following this case from the first week's posts and was blindsided by today's vitriol. Holy cow I was only away from this thread for a day and a half and already it feels like it has whipsawed from extreme victim-blaming (TY to mods for fixing that) to the start of the new thread being a guns right argument that's generalized, and not related to the folks who have been arrested (sorry I have no idea if mods have addressed that yet). WTF people?!
Matic, thank you for speaking out as you have.
I come in here to catch up on what the heck is happening to poor AA's case and all of a sudden the tones of the thread make me feel like I am part of the problem because I live in a rural area and have 3 "unregistered, not state tracked" guns (a WW2 rifle, and Korean/Vietnam era rifle, and a handgun) that I inherited last year from my 83+-year-old dad who lived with my husband and me. My dad owned those guns LEGALLY for 50+ years here in FL. It was legal for him to own them without centralized registration. They never left his house. Concealed carry (even open carry) was not applicable to how my father handled those guns. When he aged and moved in with us, we bought a gun safe, and those arms were secured in the safe. When he died 2 years ago, I inherited them but they remain in that safe, untouched. I am in Florida but gun laws in GA are not too far off from FL's. I do firmly believe that if AA's shooter had a hand gun stolen from his unlocked truck in January, that he should be accountable for that negligence., and that he is probably a negligent dumbass.
However, that is not a condition that I see as simply fixed by an "anyone who doesn't register their guns is a criminal" type mandate. Again, MOO. I think poor AA was a victim of excessive force for an unjustified "citizens arrest" but that alone does not make every gun owner a felon or miscreant. Please stop insinuating as much.
I’m going to concentrate on other cases but I will today tell you that the state of Georgia will never get a conviction on any charge. Never.
There's an obvious reason for that imo. It's sad to see.it’s sad, isn’t it? so much discussion and dissection of the victim’s character/background/culpability and virtually none about the two people who murdered him.
I'm going to agree with this poster. Except to say I think they will get some petty charges to stick.
This isn't a race issue. No one was "hunting" or "lynching" anyone.
<modsnip: Not victim friendly>
How can people say he was even afraid for his life when no one here was in his head?
<modsnip: Discussing other members>
A jury doesn't work like that
They render their verdict on facts. And the facts in this case don't show that a murder was commited. Only a justified homicide, if applicable.
I have never, at any stage, said that actually killing someone is okay. Two wrongs don't make a right here.So threatening to kill someone is a no no, but actually killing someone is ok? Because there seems to be a fair amount of borderline excuses and blaming the victim on this thread.
Well said.Trying to detain AA unlawfully set off a chain of events for which they are responsible.
I have never, at any stage, said that actually killing someone is okay. Two wrongs don't make a right here.
Which is a comment about the credibility of a lawyer giving an opinion on the case, not an insinuation that it is okay to actually kill people.no you didn’t actually say that but ... “Sorry, not credible. He thinks the citizens arrest was illegal "because the man was jogging." .He was not jogging, he was running away from a property that he had no business entering.”
Yes, AA trespassed. That fact, however, does not change the fact that the citizens arrest was illegal.He thinks the citizens arrest was illegal "because the man was jogging." .He was not jogging, he was running away from a property that he had no business entering.”
Yes, AA trespassed. That fact, however, does not change the fact that the citizens arrest was illegal.
Georgia only allows citizens arrests for a felony that was witnessed directly. Trespassing is not a felony.
Likewise, Georgia law allows property owners or their agents to confront trespassers and also to confront people to prevent trespass. Once AA left the property (running away, resuming his jog, or say, by skipping) he was no longer trespassing and could not be confronted.
I do, however, agree with you that the confrontation did not occur in a total vacuum. Following a conviction for murder, soft aspects such as AA did trespass can be taken into consideration for the sentencing.
A lot of developments.
Many more people involved in tracking Arbery, looking like Arbery got water at the house, other people wandering through the site, English advised by the beat cop to call on GM for assistance.
GM leaked the shooting video, reportedly there is another video of the shooting.
Please accept my apology for suggesting that you felt that way.sorry I should have made it clear, those were not my words. It was another quote from the poster I was responding to.
Yes, AA trespassed. That fact, however, does not change the fact that the citizens arrest was illegal.
Georgia only allows citizens arrests for a felony that was witnessed directly. Trespassing is not a felony.
Likewise, Georgia law allows property owners or their agents to confront trespassers and also to confront people to prevent trespass. Once AA left the property (running away, resuming his jog, or say, by skipping) he was no longer trespassing and could not be confronted.
I do, however, agree with you that the confrontation did not occur in a total vacuum. Following a conviction for murder, soft aspects such as AA did trespass can be taken into consideration for the sentencing.
So this information is not correct?
Georgia Concealed Carry Gun Laws & WCL: USCCA CCW Reciprocity Map
CARRY IN VEHICLE?
Can you carry a concealed handgun in a vehicle in Georgia?
Yes, any person not prohibited by law from possessing a handgun may carry a weapon openly or concealed without a permit in his or her own vehicle (owned or rented). In a vehicle you do not own, you must have the permission of the person who has legal control of the vehicle.
ok, this is MOO but I've been following this case from the first week's posts and was blindsided by today's vitriol. Holy cow I was only away from this thread for a day and a half and already it feels like it has whipsawed from extreme victim-blaming (TY to mods for fixing that) to the start of the new thread being a guns right argument that's generalized, and not related to the folks who have been arrested (sorry I have no idea if mods have addressed that yet). WTF people?!
Matic, thank you for speaking out as you have.
I come in here to catch up on what the heck is happening to poor AA's case and all of a sudden the tones of the thread make me feel like I am part of the problem because I live in a rural area and have 3 "unregistered, not state tracked" guns (a WW2 rifle, and Korean/Vietnam era rifle, and a handgun) that I inherited last year from my 83+-year-old dad who lived with my husband and me. My dad owned those guns LEGALLY for 50+ years here in FL. It was legal for him to own them without centralized registration. They never left his house. Concealed carry (even open carry) was not applicable to how my father handled those guns. When he aged and moved in with us, we bought a gun safe, and those arms were secured in the safe. When he died 2 years ago, I inherited them but they remain in that safe, untouched. I am in Florida but gun laws in GA are not too far off from FL's. I do firmly believe that if AA's shooter had a hand gun stolen from his unlocked truck in January, that he should be accountable for that negligence., and that he is probably a negligent dumbass.
However, that is not a condition that I see as simply fixed by an "anyone who doesn't register their guns is a criminal" type mandate. Again, MOO. I think poor AA was a victim of excessive force for an unjustified "citizens arrest" but that alone does not make every gun owner a felon or miscreant. Please stop insinuating as much.
I'm going to agree with this poster. Except to say I think they will get some petty charges to stick.
This isn't a race issue. No one was "hunting" or "lynching" anyone.
<modsnip: Not victim friendly>
How can people say he was even afraid for his life when no one here was in his head?
<modsnip: Discussing other members>
A jury doesn't work like that
They render their verdict on facts. And the facts in this case don't show that a murder was commited. Only a justified homicide, if applicable.