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Suspect in police chase likely to face charges for deaths in news copter collision
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/07/27/hel...ash/index.html
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Yet, earlier in the same article: Quote:
I would've understood if, say, police officers died during the chase, but holding the suspect responsible for reporter casualties? |
Threatening criminal charges here is just a reaction to being pissed off that innocent people died, but there's no way the fugitive can legally be held accountable for those deaths. Technically he may have been the catalyst of the events, but it's not his fault that the pilots didn't organise their air traffic properly. He didn't directly influence them in any way.
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As fucked up as this is, the pilots are responsible for their aircraft. I know that people are excited to see a STOLEN TRUCK WITH A TRALER on TV but that's really not grounds for taking your eyes off the sky; just like it's not acceptable to cause a wreck for talking on a cell phone.
My condolances, in any case. Now I'm wondering which pilot was the cause of the crash. |
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They interviewed a guy who said it looked like they got too close and then just got sucked into each other real quick. Yikes. :\
In a way, it is similar to if a police car hit another civilian's car during the chase and the civilian died. The victim would have had no direct connection to the guy being chased, and in that sense, I think they could charge them. Consider it this way: what if the reporter was in the back of a police car during the chase, and the police car flipped and the reporter died? The fact that the reporters were covering criminal news that put them in harm's way may make the suspect liable. It's a stretch, but I could see it happening. |
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Maybe not in other places, but in the USA, they would never charge the cop for that. The suspect would get stung on it.
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If that's true, it's beyond all logic. The idea that you can legally get charged for a crime that someone else commits... Man that's fucked up.
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I don't see how they could possibly charge him with those deaths. The cars were in a situation that, although fast, were within the grasp of their respective controls. Two helicopter pilots far out of the way "reporting" on that car chase is far from the grasp of control of either the police OR the criminal.
Screw that criminal for putting everyone in that situation, anyway. I do NOT want him to "get away with it" because of a potential media backlash of questionable charges. Anyway, my 2 cents ;) |
From your first paragraph it seems that you think he cannot be charged as the events were out of his reasonable control, but in the second paragraph you talk about him not being charged because of a potential media backlash. I'm confused here, what exactly do you think should happen? Should he be charged with those deaths or not?
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Those pilots were 100% at fault for what happened.
This dude should not be charged with their deaths. They didn't have to crash into each other, after all. |
As much as I agree that he should not be charged, the way it works now days is that you're guilty until convicted or proven innocent. Sucks for the family of the pilots and reporters though.
I just hope some sort of sane resolution comes of this. Perhaps we'll be less likely to watch police chases, as 90% of the time I estimate, its mearly done to draw in viewers who might otherwise turn the channel. The populace's bloodlust for car chases is also to blame, but not as much as the Pilot's errors. |
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I'm mostly playing devil's advocate here. I don't know how likely a case could be, but I'm not saying you can't write it off simply because he didn't directly harm them, direct harm isn't necessary for a crime to be committed.
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I just can't see him getting charged on this one. I mean, he was not in control of the vehicles that crashed.
While I do give my condolences to the families involved, and can understand the anger involved with the situation, the fault is of the individual(s) who controlled the helicopter(s). I mean, suppose Paris Hilton and Bill Gates were seen running off to a hotel together (I know, stupid example, but just go with me here). And suppose two reporters wanted to follow via helicopter to cover the story and this same situation happened. Would it be Gates' and Hilton's fault? Absolutely not. It would be the pilot's because they were in control of the vehicle. |
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Perhaps he was doing something, like trying to signal the helicopters? That could have distracted the pilots enough to cause a collision.
Of course it doesn't say anything about that in the article, but the details are pretty scant. |
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Besides, if somebody was charged in such a case, there's no way it would hold up in a court of law, and even if it did, it could easily make it through appeals. |
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Running away when a cop chases you is already a crime, it's called resisting arrest. Charge him for that. If you want to know who made the event worth covering on the news, you need to look at who made it into a OMG CHASE! and not just yet another stolen vehicle out of millions. |
A guy on a local forum I visit pulled the felony murder statute (bold section can just be read as a sentence, pretty much):
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And note the very last part: "the person or another person causes the death of any person." Another person could be the pilot(s) at fault. Quote:
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I think it would be a joke if they were to try to charge hat guy for there deaths. If your going to fly a chopper in order to follow along with a chase you better also be looking for any other choppers, trees, power polls, or what not. Say you lose a $5 bill and it blows into the street and somebody runs out to try to take it, but gets hit by a car and getting blamed for it because it was your money which caused the guy to run out into the street.
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In the case of the helicopter crashes, I doubt that the criminal will be charged with the deaths of the pilots. They placed themselves in a potentially dangerous situation willingly, and through their fault alone they collided. The criminal had no responsibility for the safety of the helicopter crews, and it was not those crews' government mandated duty to be where they were, when they were. If it were a police chopper, it'd be different. |
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