If you read the article you wouldn't have to guess... but if that is beneath you: the lady was hosting a party for a bunch of kids, and she was chasing a 10 yr old when the neighbour got hit with the assaulting blast of evil water.
If you read the article you wouldn't have to guess... but if that is beneath you: the lady was hosting a party for a bunch of kids, and she was chasing a 10 yr old when the neighbour got hit with the assaulting blast of evil water.
I read the initial reports, lacking details, other than a dastardly armed assault by a special needs educator on a feeble man.If you read the article you wouldn't have to guess... but if that is beneath you: the lady was hosting a party for a bunch of kids, and she was chasing a 10 yr old when the neighbour got hit with the assaulting blast of evil water.
What more do you need to know? The man was assaulted, with a weapon, the lady admits to said assault... sounds cut and dry to me.Unless there's much more to this story than we're being told,
Please watch the video that I linked.What more do you need to know? The man was assaulted, with a weapon, the lady admits to said assault... sounds cut and dry to me.
There was an assault, he got wet. No one is disputing that.
It was an assault with a weapon: the water pistol. No one is disputing that.
And if the man says the lady assaulted him intentionally: that's criminal assault with a weapon... textbook example.
Where the case falls apart is on motive or intent. It's going to be an uphill battle for the prosecutor to establish, let alone PROVE Mens Rea. I betcha the prosecutor rejects the case.
I won't be entirely surprised if the "shooter" hit him intentionally and the whiner recorded it. A video could clarify intent. So far the public only has her version that it was accidental. Runkles analysis of weapon seems reasonable. Another black eye for police that have no idea what the laws are (or even worse if they know them and substitute their own reality).Please watch the video that I linked.
In short, a water gun isn't a "weapon" for purposes of the Criminal Code of Canada.
Assault requires intent, not accidental perceived harm.
I doubt this will even survive arraignment.
Assault with a weapon, top notch police work regardless. Maybe she should have said supersoaker or portable water projecting device instead of water gun... maybe the cops were triggered /s
What more do you need to know? The man was assaulted, with a weapon, the lady admits to said assault... sounds cut and dry to me.
There was an assault, he got wet. No one is disputing that.
Have you been talking to Trudeau? Let's not give him any ideas here....would be classified as assault water guns
Have you been talking to Trudeau? Let's not give him any ideas here....
TACTICAL ASSAULT WATER CARBINES... sound scary enough?
No I'm not.You're conveniently ignoring intent.
"Assault style."If it's the ones in the picture that are involved in the charge those would be classified as assault water guns and be prohibited weapons.
Not at all... but JT should have put a /s on the end of his pronouncement that legal hunting carbines are ASSAULT RIFLES. The liberals made up a classification of rifle just to scare the populace to get them to sign up to his stupid new gun laws, that have costed us billions and has done nothing. The fact that they banned the Ar but still allow the SKS says they haven't a clue, OR the whole thing is theater.Did I REALLY need to tack a /s on the end of that one?
Runkle provided the definition of a weapon. We're talking about a charge under the Criminal Code of Canada. If it's not "criminal assault" then it's not assault.I did.
A couple of things I disagree with:
1) His definition of assault does not line up with Canada's courts definition of assault. Firstly: assault is not always criminal. Harming someone by accident IS assault, just not criminal, for an assault to be criminal there must be intent to do harm. If one person does damage to another: That is assault. If a person does damage to another person INTENTIONALLY: That's CRIMINAL ASSAULT. If a person does damage to another person by way of an an asininely stupid act, that was unintentional: That's criminal negligence occasioning bodily harm (or death).
2) The criminal code defines weapon as "instrument used to assault". If someone is assaulted, using an instrument, ANY instrument (read the law, there are no exclusions) used in assault is a weapon. If you do intention harm to another person with a tissue, that tissue is a weapon. IF there was an assault, and there was an instrument used, That's assault with a weapon. The assault makes the instrument a weapon, IF you assault someone with a THING, that THING becomes a weapon, no matter what the THING is
I have been charged with assault with a weapon, and successfully argued both these points in court. The weapon was a letter ( like postage, mail. I didn't beat a guy with a giant "W")... it's all about INTENT
Someone would have a hard time making a water gun fit that definition unless the other person was told it was full of something other than water or was, as Runkle joked, the Wicked Witch of the West. Try to intimidate a credible person with a water pistol and they're likely to feed it to you.Copied straight from the CC...
weapon means any thing used, designed to be used or intended for use
and, without restricting the generality of the foregoing, includes a firearm and, for the purposes of sections 88, 267 and 272, any thing used, designed to be used or intended for use in binding or tying up a person against their will; (arme)
- (a) in causing death or injury to any person, or
- (b) for the purpose of threatening or intimidating any person
Runkle TRIED to re-define weapon.Runkle provided the definition of a weapon.
... and THAT would be assault with a weaponthey're likely to feed it to you