Straight DopeIn the U.S. suicide has never been treated as a crime nor punished by property forfeiture or ignominious burial. (Some states listed it on the books as a felony but imposed no penalty.) Curiously, as of 1963, six states still considered attempted suicide a crime--North and South Dakota, Washington, New Jersey, Nevada, and Oklahoma. Of course they didn't take matters as seriously as the Roman emperor Hadrian, who in 117 AD declared attempted suicide by soldiers a form of desertion and made it--no joke this time--a capital offense.
As a method of reducing the public tax liability, I think The State might be tempted to take a more proactive approach.It would be silly to ollegalize suicide, as the criminal would be too dead (likely as a result of suicide) to prosecute.
I think you guys mean to be discussing attempted suicide.![]()
Actually, I think that's too precise. From what I've heard, she has to be unable to distinguish between right and wrong. She has to be unable to understand that what she did was wrong.
That is not the same as saying what she did was wrong, although I certainly think it was. And just about any reasonable person would think it wrong. But I've seen plenty of cases where someone did something no one reasonable would think right to do, yet the perpetrator called the police him- or herself afterward. That's enough right there, from what I can tell, to prove they knew what they'd done was wrong, no matter how bizarre it was.
So she doesn't have to have known she was killing a living being--I think she knew that, since we don't try to kill the dead. She just has to have had no notion that what she'd done would be wrong, to have a chance at an insanity defense.
I think.
After Skinner pulled the trigger, she called 911 and told the operator she had gotten into an argument with a man named Travis, who then shot her in the stomach.
Susan Smith accusing some chimerical black man of drowning her two kids, for fifty, Alex.Okay. Then look at this from the OP link:
When she called 911, she said "Travis" did it. Sounds to me like she knew what she did was wrong. And she had the presence of mind to try to frame someone else for it.
I'm telling you guys. She was charged with the wrong statute, and there will be murder charges or something of the sort added on.
Different state, possibly different statutes. That case convinced me that Sean Hannity was an unethical shill.I'm sure you're right. After all, wasn't California "Father & Husband of the Year," Scott Peterson was charged with the murder of his unborn child as well?
Susan Smith accusing some chimerical black man of drowning her two kids, for fifty, Alex.![]()
Nor did the court system. She's still breathing air.And she will be eligible for parole in 2025. The insanity plea didn't work.
It's still criminal in the USA? I am shocked.
Personal freedom.
It would be silly to ollegalize suicide, as the criminal would be too dead (likely as a result of suicide) to prosecute.
I think you guys mean to be discussing attempted suicide.![]()
Do you have a source for that? My understanding was otherwise.
The harm to self theme easily transitions to suicide attempt, since the VA court originally could find no statute to charge her with for shooting herself, harming herself, the fetus being in their eye a part of that self.How did we get into this suicide discussion derail? It seems pretty clear that the woman was not trying to kill herself, only the baby. Is anyone arguing otherwise?
How did we get into this suicide discussion derail? It seems pretty clear that the woman was not trying to kill herself, only the baby. Is anyone arguing otherwise?
Mycroft is.
Please don't tell lies about my opinions.
Even so one would think that shooting oneself would be against the law. Or maybe performing a late-term abortion, or practicing medicine without a license.
When was suicide de-criminalized?
Why shouldn't it be illegal?
Do you have a source for that? My understanding was otherwise.
And in general I would tend to agree that it is not the business of the state to protect one from oneself, but in suicide I would make an exception as the person is demonstratably not in their right mind.
I believe, and someone more versed in the law is certainly free to correct me, that the purpose of making it illegal would be to give police the right to intervene, not to punish the would-be suicide.
That isn't how I read his general theme, that she was trying to commit suicide. The discussions seemed to progress there, as I noted above, to the general case of self harm of which suicide is a subset.(cough)
You are not arguing that the woman was trying to commit suicide?
Some people, to include the recently departed Hunter S Thompson, resort to suicide via a fairly rational (if unfortunately gloomy) assessment of the value of continued life.in suicide, I would make an exception as the person is demonstratably not in their right mind.
(cough)
You are not arguing that the woman was trying to commit suicide?