But if it's not ignored, then every crime is two crimes: the original crime, then the crime of trying to get away with the first crime.
Now you understand Nixon's pain.
But if it's not ignored, then every crime is two crimes: the original crime, then the crime of trying to get away with the first crime.
I fail to see any evidence of the police officer's being smug or badly spoken or barely literate.
Maybe it's not being English that is needed' but being something else.
Maybe. I just think the trial is itself all the public needs to know, without a cop or a lawyer delivering a crappy little sermon on the court steps. They should STFU and get on with the next case IMO. To be fair to them (why?) they are pressed into doing it by the journos who are starved of live footage to feed the viewers/readers. I would still rather they didn't.
You said he was smug, badly spoken and barely literate.
What were those insults based on?
if a criminal wears gloves or wipes his prints or creates a fake alibi, is he not intentionally attempting to deceive the police? By denying involvement, not confessing, pleading innocent, is that not an attempt to deceive the police? Isn't every crime that isn't immediately confessed to then an attempt to pervert the course of justice? .
The things you quote do not point the Police in a false direction or implicate another person for the crime. There is a difference between covering your tracks and creating a false set of tracks to mislead police. Were your criminal to plant someone else's fingerprints, trace evidence or DNA at a scene in order to point the Police in a false direction, then he's perverting the course of justice.
Scenario:
Three guys, Tom, Dick and Harry.
► Tom and Dick are friends.
► Tom murders a fourth (unnamed) person.
► Dick decides to help Tom out by planting evidence to mislead police into arresting and charging Harry for the crime.
► Harry is tried, found guilty of first degree murder and executed.
By your logic, Dick has done nothing wrong.
You're right. Now being a thoughtful friend indicates you're going to commit a crime. It's a distinction without a difference.The second quote is about his behaviour towards the school girl, not his wife.
On the contrary, he's interfered with scene of a crime.
If, however, Dick were isntead to post a YouTube video reconstructing the crime with Queen Elizabeth II as the perpetrator, and the cops believed it and pursued Her Majesty for a year with their attack helicopters and man-eating dogs, then in my court I'd throw out any attempt to charge Dick for the police's gullibility.
You are waxing ridiculous of course
What about if Dick were instead to post a YouTube video reconstructing the crime with Harry as the perpetrator?
Still think he's done nothing wrong?
Interesting how multiple counts of molestation can afford a lesser sentence than being in a consensual relationship and having consensual sex, where all the "harm" was caused not by the perpetrator of the crime but rather by the legal authorities themselves.
You're right. Now being a thoughtful friend indicates you're going to commit a crime. It's a distinction without a difference.
C - just sentenced to 5 and a half years
Ah, thanks Darat. I had a feeling I undershot with my four years. Seems about right to me.
Well he's never going to teach again so odds are that conviction also means religation from the middle class.
Probably a defective judge. Wouldn't have happened in my court. I'd have instructed my backup dancers to jeer at the very notion.
Ah, yes, "ownership" of a "tag". I would think the video proved very effectively the one thing that matters--anybody can copy a tag. Which is yet another reason for the prosecution not to bring it up in court. I'd have instructed the jury to consider that possibility, if the defence missed it.
But then, if I were the judge, I'd be wondering the whole time about why they'd be pushing for a "perversion of justice" conviction at all. Surely that's more for criminal conspiracies, cover-ups by wrongdoing authorities, organized crime, and the like. As a judge I'd be suspicious the charge was preferred solely to harrass the defendant because let's face it, vandalism is hardly a serious crime. I'd suspect someone just wanted to pot the accused on something, anything, and was hurling charges at the wall hoping something would stick. And that sort of thing would piss me off, as a judge. So even if the jury did accept a complete pig's breakfast of a case and convict on that charge, I'd sentence him on that count to time already served, and see who comes out of the woodwork to appeal that. I didn't get to be a judge by not paying attention to politics.
C - just sentenced to 5 and a half years
You are aware that the judge in the Stuart Hall case was constrained by the limited penalties that were available at the time of the offences, which have been increased considerably since?