- Joined
- Sep 17, 2020
- Messages
- 3,735
- Reaction score
- 32,726
From what I have read harrassment becomes a criminal offense when it escalates to physical contact, threats, coercion, sexual battery, assault, stalking, or rape, which are all criminal acts.
Stalking is a possibility, if people had to be walked to their cars, and coercion is very broad in scope but blocking egress from an office (intimidation) might fall under that. And I have no knowledge of any reports of physical contact or threats, but that doesn't mean they don't exist.. So yes, I'll have to see what is what.
Harassment may become criminal if it escalates a certain degree, but we're not aware of any evidence that it did in this case (or that they knew it had prior to the murders), as far as I know. I have read the lawsuit and I don't see anything in there that indicates police should have been investigating criminal behavior before the murders. If people had to be walked to their cars, without overt threat, that's not criminal. No one is responsible for someone else's feelings toward them. For instance, if John Doe creeps out Jane Doe because John Doe stares at her and Jane Doe just has a bad feeling about him, Jane Doe may ask for a police escort. It could be his stares give her chills or make the hair on her arm stand up, but unless John Doe has actively done something threatening or illegal, no one is going to hold John Doe responsible for emotions he evoked in Jane Doe, nor should they.
We all bring our own history to every interaction we have with others. Our personality and intuition is a patchwork of life experiences, environmental influences, and genetics. That's why someone may give one girl the creeps and be dating another girl who isn't nearly creeped out, despite the person exhibiting the exact same behavior. Laws are crafted to take that into consideration, which is why the bar is high to charge someone with stalking or harassment.
The other thing is that even if police had been alerted and BK had been talked to by law enforcement, I seriously doubt he would have been arrested (based on what we know) and there is no way to say he still wouldn't have committed the murders. The only thing that would have stopped BK from killing is if he was in prison at the time of the murders. Short of that, I don't think the families have a case because even if WSU didn't follow their own protocol, even if WSU could have fired him sooner, none of that suggests it would have prevented the crime.
MOO.