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On Thu, 14 Apr 2005 04:36:29 GMT, "Landshark"
wrote: Doesn't change the acts he may or may not done? If he's done something wrong, found guilty then he's a criminal. If he done nothing wrong, went to court and was found not guilty, he should still be labeled a criminal because he's being accused? What if he's done the acts he was accused of, but because of an inability for the state to prove it, or the credibility of the witnesses becomes cloudy and he walks, what does THAT make him? It make's him not guilty in a criminal court of law, sucks but that the law. In this case, I am not concerned with the determination of the law, but with the truth. A criminal who beats the rap, is still a criminal in my eyes. Note that I'm not talking about a truly innocent person here, but one that I know is guilty and who beat the rap due to a technicality or some other mitigating circumstance. A criminal might fool the flawed legal system, but he still has to face his maker one day. Think before you answer, are you there? sitting in the jury box? listening to the testimony? following the judges orders concerning what type of evidence you are going to hear? not formulating any opinion until you and the rest of your fellow jurors are deliberating the case? Of course not, so how can you say because someone here is running a 1000 watts and talking on the freeband is a criminal? If you witness someone killing another, do you need a jury verdict before you know that that person is a murderer? Yup, right now he's only a killer, but after the court rules he's guilty, then he's a murderer. What? Are you really going to play these word games? I heard someone on 2 meters last night, swearing, threating people, is he guilty of violating FCC rules? Absolutely! If the law defines a particular act as criminal, then if you engage in that act, you are engaging in a criminal activity. Being labeled as such by a court is only a formality and a convenient excuse for people who want to thumb their nose at the law, and wish to ease their guilty conscience, by trying to convince themselves that their activities aren't really criminal because they haven't been caught yet.. No, it's a fact. Going around chasing speeders, j-walkers, litterbugs etc etc and calling them criminals will change nothing. Nor will stating that a person clearly engaging in a particular criminal activity isn't really a criminal because they haven't been caught or convicted of it yet. ???, so you are saying that they are a suspect, good. Cause they can't be a criminal unless they have been convicted of doing that criminal act. Again, you are wrapping yourself in the semantics of the law and lulling yourself into a false sense of security. If you do the crime, but don't get caught, you are still technically a criminal, whether or not that "badge" can be legally applied to you. You'll have to start calling 4 out of 10 people you know criminals then, because by a national survey that's the percentage that speed. Speeding is not considered a criminal offense. Sure it is, going 100 mph is construed as a misdemeanor, thus punishable by up to 1 year in the county jail and/or fine. I'm not sure that's the law in every state. Even if it is though, your earlier ratio of 4 out of 10 people no longer applies since most speeders don't exceed the speed limit by more than 20 MPH Operating a radio transmitter without a license is. Interesting that you lump illegally operating a radio transmitter in with such trivial summary offenses as jay-walking, speeding and simple littering. You consider 1 year in jail and $1000.00 fine as trivial? I've never known anyone who went to jail for simple speeding, jay-walking or littering. Now if the speeding charge was in conjunction with something else like a DUI or a vehicular homicide, well, that's a different story. Those summary offenses do not carry criminal penalties. Both excessive speed and litter are misdemeanors and carry severe penalties Not in my state. Littering carries a $300 max fine, and no jail time. Maybe in a legal sense, but that's a poor justification for engaging in criminal behavior, and saying; "you can't call me a criminal because a jury didn't convict me yet". Might be, but is correct. A well known business man is accused by his ex-wife of being a child molester. DA says that he won't prosecute because lack of evidence and it doesn't look like he really did anything. You start calling him a child molester and criminal to friends and people that you know, that will leave you open for a slander lawsuit, that's why you don't run around accusing people of being criminals. Ah, but there is a fine difference. A person accused is presumed innocent until proven guilty. Correct and you still go on defending calling people criminals that haven't had their day in court? Doesn't make sense. If you are willingly engaging in a criminal activity, then you are technically a criminal regardless whether you've been caught yet. Again, you are arguing semantics. A conviction only makes it official in the eyes of the law. Conversely, not being caught does not diminish the severity of the criminal activity you have chosen to undertake. But you know as well as I do that the system is flawed, and many times guilty people walk for various reasons. Correct, and they can then be sued in civil court, but they still won't be construed as a criminal. I don't want to get side tracked by the seeming conflict in the evidentiary methods to determine civil liability versus criminal liability. If one is cleared of a criminal charge, then they should not be liable civilly either. But we both know that this is not the case. In the O.J Simpson case, he was criminally found not guilty, but in a civil court he was found to be responsible for the "wrongful death" of Ron Goldman and Nicole. So here we have a guy who's not a criminal, but still responsible for the death of 2 people. Logically that just doesn't make sense. Conversely, some innocent people are wrongly convicted. But if I witness a crime, I don't need a jury to tell me that the perp is a criminal Did the alleged "child molester" brag to a bunch of people on an internet forum that he did indeed molest children? Admitting to an unlawful activity is the same thing in principle to pleading guilty in a trial. It may be "unofficial" but that's all I need to see to make up my mind. He might be one of those people that confess about everything, it makes them fell important. That still doesn't make them a criminal. It does if he was telling the truth. If I arbitrarily call you a federal lawbreaking criminal for violation of FCC rules on freebanding or power levels, and I can't prove it, it becomes libel (Assuming you really aren't doing it). If, on the other hand, I monitor you doing it, or you brag to other people that you do it, then you are engaging in a criminal activity. To which I am just a suspect, not a criminal. You would be clearly committing a criminal act. Again, I don't need a jury verdict to convince me. If you conscience bothers you, yes. If you are of sound moral principles, then it should. If not, then you start bordering on sociopathic tendencies. Oh please Dave, that's crazy talk, sociopath tendencies. What's crazy about it? Sociopaths exhibit a clear lack of conscience. That is well documented. But like most things in life, human psychology is not a black and white issue. Most of us have varying degrees of personality traits which fall on a scale somewhere. We are considered "normal" if those traits fall into line with established norms. A sociopath has little remorse, or guilt for the things that they do. Other people are troubled by the simplest transgression that they may inadvertently do. Someone who falls closer to the sociopath on the conscience scale (Sociopathic tendencies) would be less troubled by transgressions against society. Once again, this is to accommodate a person's presumption of innocence in the course of due process . And once again, if you witness a crime, you don't need a jury to tell you what your senses already did. Why is it that when a records check is done on a person, they an arrest record & criminal record? why not just one? Because it is just that, one is different from the other. Exactly. Any time a police officer is called to your house, an incident report is filed. Every time a person is arrested a report is filed. That is just SOP. I think you are still missing the point a bit. I'm not talking about accusing an innocent person of a crime. I'm talking about people who are clearly and willingly engaging in criminal activity, who try to justify their criminal behavior by claiming that they're not really criminals because they've managed to evade prosecution. As if that makes it ok. But the act is the same whether they're caught or not. Oh, by the way, that ham operator using the foul language and threating people, his callsign he was using was N3CVJ. By you're logic, that alone should brand you a criminal. No, since I did not do it, and the distance between us makes it very unlikely that you heard me. Now, if I stated that I did it and/or you witnessed ME doing it, and you could positively identify me, then you could factually make that statement. Gheez Dave, exactly what I've been saying with the exception of the record of conviction. But the difference is that I'm not here bragging about all the people I jam on a nightly basis on ham radio. I'm not involved in criminal activities. The people I make reference to as "federal criminals" are those who admit to running in violation of FCC rules. I have never accused anyone who hasn't claimed the same. Yes, it's deliberately done with a bit of a shock value. It's to counter the rampant mindset that someone isn't really doing anything wrong simply because the FCC is too incompetent and understaffed to catch them yet. Dave |