diamonddogs
Well-Known Member
Mmmmmm. You could probably get him on 'behaviour likely to cause harassment alarm or distress', but it still would only be a fairly minor public order offence with not much of a penalty.
And of course, we know her body was still on the lawn the following morning. How many parents taking their children to school had to walk past a dead mare, albeit one concealed by a bloodstained sheet? And just because the penalty would be negligible, is this a reason NOT to prosecute?
We certainly do....since you were accusing me of starting an unhappy debate....and you were the only one debating it LOL. ;-)
Nobody's having a go at you for raising this issue, it's just that we're on 20 pages now (with my settings, maybe a lot more for other people) and there's several lines of discussion going on, and it's getting a bit confusing to follow all the lines of discussion.
Where on earth did this learned discussion on psychopathy/sociopathy emerge? Apart from someone calling a bloke they have never met a psycopath?
That was me, I think, but I didn't call anyone a psychopath (maybe someone else did, but I'm guilty for posting the list), just dropped something into the mix.
I doubt you have met a real social psychopath...
I wouldn't know, since they don't all go around with machetes down their trousers and a Hannibal Lecter mask on. Most function on the same level as the next person and might never display any violent tendencies whatsoever.
I personally can't get away from, whatever the rights and wrongs of both sides of the arguments, that this person loaded a dead/dying horse in a JCB bucket and dumped it in the front garden of a suburban street. Seriously ? Who on earth does he think he is ? Where are we living ?
Agree 100%
Do you hear the people sing ? Walk the walk
A good idea, but not practical for most people, specially at a point in the year when everyone's horses are starting to take up a lot more of their time, and it's not always possible to take a day off to attend a demo.
And personally, I don't fancy my chances against someone with a cabinet full of guns who's not afraid to use them.
Which brings me back to something I've been banging on about all along - they can surely have him on firearms offences? It's all getting a bit confusing but I'm sure I read that he used a pistol on Kit, not a humane killer, so an offence must have been committed?