This is a really interesting case. Self defence is a very, very gray area in Australian Law. According to the Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935, the Defence I’d imagine would have to give evidence and provide appropriate witness testimonies in order to ascertain that there was a genuine belief that the suspected aggressor’s (Dean Schmitz) conduct was sufficiently threatening to warrant the degree to which she defended herself. This is despite the fact that the burden of proof relies on the prosecutor as without sufficient cause to believe her belief was genuine, I cannot see the prosecutors having a difficult time persuading the court to agree with their contention.
(5) If a defendant raises a defence under this section, the defence is taken to have been established unless the prosecution disproves the defence beyond reasonable doubt.
That said, she does allege that he ‘ran into her scissors’ so this could suggest a moment of panic. However, by pulling out scissors (despite her intention according to her, that she merely wanted to scare him/them as this can be considered an Unlawful threat according to section 19 of the act) she had essentially ‘armed herself’ with a ‘weapon’ and so, should Dean be alive and this was a mere assault, he could’ve argued that he acted pre-emptively as a means of self-defence himself (Being that, though he was acquainted with the individual who launched the bottle at her, he was not the perpetrator himself) if he held a genuine belief that she intended to use those scissors against him with ill intent. So… The crux of the matter really is intention/motive..
19—Unlawful threats
(1) A person who—
(a) threatens, without lawful excuse, to kill or endanger the life of another; and
(b) intends to arouse a fear that the threat will be, or is likely to be, carried out, or is recklessly indifferent as to whether such a fear is aroused.
The timeline of events is vital to this case, so I can’t really say much about it simply based on that article. The hate crime itself should definitely not go unpunished, however, that is an entirely different cause of assault that Chrishaun McDonald has to bring to the court against the individual who threw the bottle at her in addition to its relevance to this case.
I think I’ll keep tabs on this case and see how it unfolds once some of the facts are decided upon… It seems to be all up in the air with a can full of confusion right now. I really don’t know what to think about it other than it’s all really unfortunate. Interesting! But very unfortunate.
[EDIT] That and I'm basing my logic on Australian law, not American law.. Despite similarities. Curse not reading that it was in the US! >:O I seriously need to sleep me thinks, my brain is evidently fried.
(Ammonite.. The question is not that it was grounds enough to be arrested, but if there is likely to be enough evidence for a conviction. =D We'll have to stay tuned.)
Sometimes words are not sufficient to delineate an experience, whether it is physical or metaphysical. Love is such an experience, but just because it cannot be so absolutely defined, does not negate its presence. Instead, the very nature of encountering such a depth of feeling is tribute to love as a phenomenon that is so intricate that given all the complexities of the English language it is still inadequate.
- Precedence
Last edited by Precedence: 2nd May 2012 at 03:20 AM
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