Trayvon Martin all over again.

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interchange

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
8,025
2,876
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Watched that entire video. The guy is pretty good with the facts. But I will disagree with him on a couple of points. He implied that Arbury going on to the construction site "might" have been a B&E, but doesn't address Georgia's B&E statute. Unauthorized entry onto property is not enough. There must be an intent to commit theft or a felony. That cannot be proven, as Arbury is not shown stealing anything on those videos. Nor were thefts reported from that construction site. This was trespass, a misdemeanor. Given that his legal analysis of citizen's arrest law is pretty good here, he should have gotten that right.

They have to have probable cause, though. Whether he actually had intent to steal is not technically a relevant fact for a defense of citizen's arrest. Of course, looking around the construction site itself is not enough.
 

HumblePie

Lifer
Oct 30, 2000
14,665
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They have to have probable cause, though. Whether he actually had intent to steal is not technically a relevant fact for a defense of citizen's arrest. Of course, looking around the construction site itself is not enough.

Incorrect. Georgia law for citizen's arrest is not based on probable cause but the lesser legal bar of reasonable suspicion by an average person. It says that directly in the statute.
 

interchange

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
8,025
2,876
136
Incorrect. Georgia law for citizen's arrest is not based on probable cause but the lesser legal bar of reasonable suspicion by an average person. It says that directly in the statute.

It says reasonable and probable in the statute.
 

pauldun170

Diamond Member
Sep 26, 2011
9,273
5,328
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A good article from actual lawyer Bronze Star winning Harvard graduate, probably more informed than AT eLawyers and eVigilantes :

https://thedispatch.com/p/a-vigilante-killing-in-Georgia

It eviscerates any "defense" these gentlemen might have.

That's out of date and missing info

New evidence has been revealed such as:
- The construction site being exposed as a tourist attraction.
- The owner of the site stating nothing was ever taken
- The owner has denying the accusation about stolen fishing gear

All we have left now is dumbasses, far right and extremists pushing bullshit narratives, what-ifs, "Evidence that we don't know" and nitpicking over laws that they don't understand.

 

HumblePie

Lifer
Oct 30, 2000
14,665
440
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It says reasonable and probable in the statute.

Which means it protects for both bars of legal justification.

I hate the misnaming bit about calling it Citizen's Arrest, because it is more or less Citizen's Detaining. Citizen's still aren't arresting people, cuffing them, or reading them their rights. They are just detaining them until the cops arrive. Shop keepers do this all the time for people they suspect of shoplifting. It is meant for the lesser bar for this reason. If an associate witnesses what they think is shoplifting, or behavior that looks like it, they can report to the manager and the manager can detain the person. The manager does NOT need to witness the suspected behavior nor actually have probable cause to detain someone for law enforcement.
 

interchange

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
8,025
2,876
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Which means it protects for both bars of legal justification.

I hate the misnaming bit about calling it Citizen's Arrest, because it is more or less Citizen's Detaining. Citizen's still aren't arresting people, cuffing them, or reading them their rights. They are just detaining them until the cops arrive. Shop keepers do this all the time for people they suspect of shoplifting. It is meant for the lesser bar for this reason. If an associate witnesses what they think is shoplifting, or behavior that looks like it, they can report to the manager and the manager can detain the person. The manager does NOT need to witness the suspected behavior nor actually have probable cause to detain someone for law enforcement.

And does not mean or.
 
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woolfe9998

Lifer
Apr 8, 2013
16,236
14,236
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They have to have probable cause, though. Whether he actually had intent to steal is not technically a relevant fact for a defense of citizen's arrest. Of course, looking around the construction site itself is not enough.

First off, HP is likely correct that reasonable suspicion is the standard, though I'd have to look at how Georgia interpets "reasonable and probable suspicion" to be sure. However, what I am referring to the is the phrase "if the offense is a felony" meaning they must have reasonable and probable suspicion of a felony.

Merely walking onto a construction site is a misdemeanor which does not trigger the protection of the citizen's arrest statute. That is the only thing they knew of that he had done. But going onto a property with intent to commit theft or a felony is burglary under Georgia's B&E law, which is itself a felony. However, these guys were aware of exactly zero evidence of intent to steal so all they could reasonably suspect was a trespass.
 
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Ichinisan

Lifer
Oct 9, 2002
28,298
1,235
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That's out of date and missing info

New evidence has been revealed such as:
- The construction site being exposed as a tourist attraction.
- The owner of the site stating nothing was ever taken
- The owner has denying the accusation about stolen fishing gear

All we have left now is dumbasses, far right and extremists pushing bullshit narratives, what-ifs, "Evidence that we don't know" and nitpicking over laws that they don't understand.

That video is absurd.

1:40 "Because we don't know the person's identity, we're blurring it."

The earlier footage looks like the same person. They are certain the video from the day of the shooting was also Ahmaud? What are they so much more certain about that one?

2:09 "Less than 2 weeks later on February 23rd, a person believed to be Ahmaud Arbery triggers the cameras again."

Oh. So they're not actually sure. Why do they choose to blur the earlier recordings? They look like the same person.

The person in multiple older clips looks just as much like Ahmaud as the video from the day of the shooting.

https://www.ajc.com/news/ahmaud-arb...its-construction-site/bxXtdHfHza9iHzezH3hdxI/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q7N6bC5cnVU#t=35s
Jump to 35 seconds.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/18/us/ahmaud-arbery-surveillance-timeline/index.html
"When asked about the new videos, S. Lee Merritt, attorney for the Arbery family, said he was not going to continue to ask the family about people seen in surveillance videos."

WTF? Why? That would help a lot. This looks bad.
 
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interchange

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
8,025
2,876
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First off, HP is likely correct that reasonable suspicion is the standard, though I'd have to look at how Georgia interpets "reasonable and probable suspicion" to be sure. However, what I am referring to the is the phrase "if the offense is a felony" meaning they must have reasonable and probable suspicion of a felony.

I'm having a little trouble with interpreting that as reasonable suspicion, since the statute is not for a temporary detainment for questioning but rather for a citizen's arrest which would be indefinite until police arrive. The text would not reasonably allow you to detain someone so you could determine whether you had grounds for arrest. Of course, this is a separate statute, and a lot of the boundaries of these things for police have been defined through case law after this one was in the books, and I doubt there is much case law or recent case law to aid in the interpretation. Still, just taking at face value the words, how could you not take "probable" to mean anything less than 50% sure?

Merely walking onto a construction site is a misdemeanor which does not trigger the protection of the citizen's arrest statute. That is the only thing they knew of that he had done. But going onto a property with intent to commit theft or a felony is burglary under Georgia's B&E law, which is itself a felony. However, these guys were aware of exactly zero evidence of intent to steal so all they could reasonably suspect was a trespass.

As I said, merely entering the premises and running off are not probable cause. I don't know if I would agree that, if you saw someone going on to a property you knew wasn't theirs and after being noticed they took off running, that this wouldn't be reasonable suspicion. Of course, even that narrative of events isn't firmly established.

But I would not say zero evidence so plainly. We'll see what gets presented in court if it gets that far.
 

JEDIYoda

Lifer
Jul 13, 2005
33,986
3,321
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Incorrect. Georgia law for citizen's arrest is not based on probable cause but the lesser legal bar of reasonable suspicion by an average person. It says that directly in the statute.
My God Jim!! Can`t you stop arguing for those 2 guys to get off scott free?
It is blatantly obviuos you think they did nothing wrong....well pother than assassinate an unarmed black man.....
 

woolfe9998

Lifer
Apr 8, 2013
16,236
14,236
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I'm having a little trouble with interpreting that as reasonable suspicion, since the statute is not for a temporary detainment for questioning but rather for a citizen's arrest which would be indefinite until police arrive. The text would not reasonably allow you to detain someone so you could determine whether you had grounds for arrest. Of course, this is a separate statute, and a lot of the boundaries of these things for police have been defined through case law after this one was in the books, and I doubt there is much case law or recent case law to aid in the interpretation. Still, just taking at face value the words, how could you not take "probable" to mean anything less than 50% sure?



As I said, merely entering the premises and running off are not probable cause. I don't know if I would agree that, if you saw someone going on to a property you knew wasn't theirs and after being noticed they took off running, that this wouldn't be reasonable suspicion. Of course, even that narrative of events isn't firmly established.

But I would not say zero evidence so plainly. We'll see what gets presented in court if it gets that far.

Given that this was a construction site where it is not uncommon for people to merely trespass, I doubt there could be reasonable suspicion or probable cause of intent to steal. Indeed, the fact he had been on the site on prior occasions with no reports of theft known to those men actually hurts their case rather than helps it. And there really isn't anything of value to steal on a construction which could fit into someone's pockets. The valuable stuff (lumber, piping etc.) would have to be hauled away in a vehicle. Even small tools would not be present as those are not left around when work crews are not there.

I think you're going to find that these guys will lose the argument on the citizen's arrest statute. Instead, the case will come down to whether there was an underlying "assault" when they brandished the shotguns. This requires that their actions created "a reasonable apprehension of immediately receiving a violent injury" by Arbury. If there's an assault, then they both go down for murder under the felony murder rule. If not, then the father gets off (or misdemeanor brandishing at most) while the son likely gets manslaughter.
 

HumblePie

Lifer
Oct 30, 2000
14,665
440
126
First off, HP is likely correct that reasonable suspicion is the standard, though I'd have to look at how Georgia interpets "reasonable and probable suspicion" to be sure. However, what I am referring to the is the phrase "if the offense is a felony" meaning they must have reasonable and probable suspicion of a felony.

Merely walking onto a construction site is a misdemeanor which does not trigger the protection of the citizen's arrest statute. That is the only thing they knew of that he had done. But going onto a property with intent to commit theft or a felony is burglary under Georgia's B&E law, which is itself a felony. However, these guys were aware of exactly zero evidence of intent to steal so all they could reasonably suspect was a trespass.

Umm there is a bit more info on that. Greg, the father and previous cop, had dealings with Arbery in the past. He was the one to investigate him for shop lifting in 2018 and knew about his prior records which included a weapons charge when he brought a gun to a high school basketball game. This wasn't Greg's first encounter with Arbery we now know. Greg had been part of the facebook page in dealing with people coming into the area and stealing stuff or moving things around at the very least.

What is going to be argued in court is if those past incidents would lead a normal person, as Greg was a civilian at the time, to reasonably believe Arbery had stolen something when they saw him trespassing again, or was casing the place with the intent to steal in the future. That is going to be a key factor in if the McMichaels get off without any guilty verdict. If it was reasonable for a person with their knowledge to believe Arbery had committed a felony at the time and may have been armed, then they are really protected by the Citizens Arrest statute. Meaning they'll get off without any charges sticking.

There are really two parts to this case. Would anyone with the evidence at had to the McMichaels have a reasonable suspicion that Arbery had committed a crime to affect a detainment until law enforcement arrived. That is issue one. Second, was the use of force use for detainment and what that constitutes. Of course if the first legal issue doesn't go well for the McMichaels, the second is going to be far worse. They will more than likely get felony aggravated assault and murder if the jury doesn't find that they had reasonable suspicion a crime occurred at all. Which I don't think that will happen because they witnessed him trespassing at the minimum. Trespass is a crime and people can affect a citizen's arrest over it in Georgia. Just like how shop keepers can affect a citizen's arrest over a suspected shoplifting incident which is also a misdemeanor crime everywhere in this country.

If the McMichaels are deemed in a court to have reasonable suspicion to affect a citizen's arrest in a court, all that means is it highly unlikely that they get felony assault and murder. That doesn't mean they are off the hook. There is still the problem with reasonable use of force to affect the citizen's arrest. This is where the nitty gritty and ugly arguments will come into play I think in the court room. Following in a truck and even carrying weapons I don't think is the problem here. The issue was getting out of the truck and possibly having the shotgun pointed at Arbery at the time. That would be an escalation of force that a jury may not find reasonable to the situation. If not, Travis will get reckless use of force and endangerment charges at the least and possibly negligent/reckless homicide as a guilty verdict. I am leaning in this camp as to what is going to happen. As I have said though, we don't have all the evidence yet on this case. There may be more witnesses we don't know about, more video, and other evidence from the scene at the time. We don't know if Arbery had not stolen anything at the time either and then dumped it while escaping the McMichaels. He had previously dumped stuff from his prior run ins with the law that he was convicted of. Also, many in his inner circle had been convicted of crimes as well at the time Greg had been investigating Arbery for his shoplifting crime in 2018. Which means Greg would know the circumstances of those as well at the time of this incident.

I have stated the following many times in this thread. We don't have all the evidence. We can all express opinions on the evidence and the likely outcome of the case. I am just trying to do my best to correct mistakes other posters have made, which may include myself, on this case as it progresses for the public. I am surprised still by how much evidence keeps getting leaked out though. I would be worried about possible tainted jury pools if I was handling the investigation of this case.
 
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woolfe9998

Lifer
Apr 8, 2013
16,236
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Umm there is a bit more info on that. Greg, the father and previous cop, had dealings with Arbery in the past. He was the one to investigate him for shop lifting in 2018 and knew about his prior records which included a weapons charge when he brought a gun to a high school basketball game. This wasn't Greg's first encounter with Arbery we now know. Greg had been part of the facebook page in dealing with people coming into the area and stealing stuff or moving things around at the very least.

What is going to be argued in court is if those past incidents would lead a normal person, as Greg was a civilian at the time, to reasonably believe Arbery had stolen something when they saw him trespassing again, or was casing the place with the intent to steal in the future. That is going to be a key factor in if the McMichaels get off without any guilty verdict. If it was reasonable for a person with their knowledge to believe Arbery had committed a felony at the time and may have been armed, then they are really protected by the Citizens Arrest statute. Meaning they'll get off without any charges sticking.

There are really two parts to this case. Would anyone with the evidence at had to the McMichaels have a reasonable suspicion that Arbery had committed a crime to affect a detainment until law enforcement arrived. That is issue one. Second, was the use of force use for detainment and what that constitutes. Of course if the first legal issue doesn't go well for the McMichaels, the second is going to be far worse. They will more than likely get felony aggravated assault and murder if the jury doesn't find that they had reasonable suspicion a crime occurred at all. Which I don't think that will happen because they witnessed him trespassing at the minimum. Trespass is a crime and people can affect a citizen's arrest over it in Georgia. Just like how shop keepers can affect a citizen's arrest over a suspected shoplifting incident which is also a misdemeanor crime everywhere in this country.

If the McMichaels are deemed in a court to have reasonable suspicion to affect a citizen's arrest in a court, all that means is it highly unlikely that they get felony assault and murder. That doesn't mean they are off the hook. There is still the problem with reasonable use of force to affect the citizen's arrest. This is where the nitty gritty and ugly come into play I think in the court room. Following a truck and even carrying weapons I don't think is the problem here. The issue was getting out of the truck and possibly having the shotgun pointed at Arbery at the time. That would be an escalation of force that a jury may not find reasonable to the situation. If not, Travis will get reckless use of force and endangerment charges at the least and possibly negligent/reckless homicide as a guilty verdict. I am leaning in this camp as to what is going to happen. As I have said though, we don't have all the evidence yet on this case. There may be more witnesses we don't know about, more video, and other evidence from the scene at the time. We don't know if Arbery had not stolen anything at the time either and then dumped it while escaping the McMichaels. He had previously dumped stuff from his prior run ins with the law that he was convicted of. Also, many in his inner circle had been convicted of crimes as well at the time Greg had been investigating Arbery for his shoplifting crime in 2018. Which means Greg would know the circumstances of those as well at the time of this incident.

As I said right now already several times. We don't have all the evidence. We can all express opinions on the evidence and the likely outcome of the case. I am just trying to do my best to correct mistakes other posters have made, which may include myself, on this case as it progresses for the public. I am surprised still by how much evidence keeps getting leaked out though. I would be worried about possible tainted jury pools if I was handling the investigation of this case.

You're saying that the father having "investigated" Arbury for "shoplifting" two years earlier would affect his suspicion of Arbery then? Is it even reasonable to assume the father would have known it was the same guy? He may say he did recognize him, but I have a hard time believing that. He didn't know Arbury's name. He would have had to ID him as the black man he investigated for a misdemeanor 2 years back, something he probably spent all of 5 minutes doing, because there really isn't much to investigate with shoplifting.

Again, my prediction is that they're going to lose the argument over the citizen's arrest statute. We'll see who's right here.
 
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interchange

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
8,025
2,876
136
Given that this was a construction site where it is not uncommon for people to merely trespass, I doubt there could be reasonable suspicion or probable cause of intent to steal. Indeed, the fact he had been on the site on prior occasions with no reports of theft known to those men actually hurts their case rather than helps it. And there really isn't anything of value to steal on a construction which could fit into someone's pockets. The valuable stuff (lumber, piping etc.) would have to be hauled away in a vehicle. Even small tools would not be present as those are not left around when work crews are not there.

I think it's reasonable to think that something worth stealing might be left behind at a construction site, but I also think that if you presented a would-be thief with some data you collected surveying what you found that could readily be accessed and carried at 100 homes under construction, they'd probably think it isn't worth their time. But no one presented that data, so what's operative are what we can ascertain about their understandings at the time and if they were reasonable.

Still, I'll again underscore that going into a construction site where there are known valuables far from establishes probable cause that the trespasser intends to steal them.

I think you're going to find that these guys will lose the argument on the citizen's arrest statute. Instead, the case will come down to whether there was an underlying "assault" when they brandished the shotguns. This requires that their actions created "a reasonable apprehension of immediately receiving a violent injury" by Arbury. If there's an assault, then they both go down for murder under the felony murder rule. If not, then the father gets off (or misdemeanor brandishing at most) while the son likely gets manslaughter.

The citizen's arrest defense won't be tested if the state can't prove any of their cases in the first place.
 

HumblePie

Lifer
Oct 30, 2000
14,665
440
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My God Jim!! Can`t you stop arguing for those 2 guys to get off scott free?
It is blatantly obviuos you think they did nothing wrong....well pother than assassinate an unarmed black man.....

I am not using my emotions to cloud my judgement of assessing the evidence we get on the case and my interpretations of the law. Nor do I allow it to cloud my judgement when evaluating what various experts on this are saying regardless of their political leanings. I really don't give two shits about anyone in this case and it is just an interesting story to follow. I have nothing emotionally invested at all in the outcome here as it has no way to affect my life in the slightest. Whether the McMichaels go to jail both for murder or they get off free doesn't matter to me in the end. I have attachment to the outcome here. I am simply using this thread as an interesting diversion into the legal system here as the evidence comes out. It is also interesting to a degree to see some of the wild remarks made in here and elsewhere based on nothing but emotion. To which you have been guilty of several times in this thread.
 
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HumblePie

Lifer
Oct 30, 2000
14,665
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You're saying that the father having "investigated" Arbury for "shoplifting" two years earlier would affect his suspicion of Arbery then? Is it even reasonable to assume the father would have known it was the same guy? He may say he did recognize him, but I have a hard time believing that. He didn't know Arbury's name. He would have had to ID him as the black man he investigated for a misdemeanor 2 years back, something he probably spent all of 5 minutes doing, because there really isn't much to investigate with shoplifting.

Again, my prediction is that they're going to lose the argument over the citizen's arrest statute. We'll see who's right here.

For cops, as part of getting everything ready for a court case would be spending a lot more than a few minutes even for something as simple as shoplifting. Unless it was settled out of court. I don't know all the specific details about that case yet. I would think Greg would have seen picture evidence of Arbery at the time of the shoplifting evidence and it wouldn't be too hard to recognize him potentially as the same guy in this trespassing incident a couple years later. Maybe he did and maybe he didn't. If he did it has some relevance on the case.

Also, Larry English, the owner of the house and the additional storage area under construction, had been posting on the Facebook page the problems he was having with stuff going missing or being moved around like his boat and fishing gear. He also reported this to the police and an officer texted him in December to use Greg as a resource if he needed to ask about what to do. Larry's premise had been under construction for awhile and it seems there has been more than a few trespass incidents during that long time as well as other reported incidents of theft in the months prior. That was why he installed the security system in the first place with motion activated cameras. It isn't normally common for people to do this on construction sites that I know of.

I don't think the McMichaels defense is going to lose the argument over citizen's arrest with the current evidence at least for affecting an arrest over a misdemeanor trespass. They may lose it over affecting a citizen's arrest over suspect felony B&E and burglary though. If they don't lose the later argument, they are off scott free. If they do lose the argument over the felony based citizen's arrest, but not the misdemeanor one, they they can lose the argument over the amount of justified use of force. Of course if they lose the argument over the citizen's arrest for a misdemeanor, and I think this highly unlikely, they would most likely use the argument against felony aggravated assault next.
 

JEDIYoda

Lifer
Jul 13, 2005
33,986
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HumblePie

Lifer
Oct 30, 2000
14,665
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It has been stated over and over agaiin on both FOX and CNN and MCNBC by various attorneys that what happened 2 years ago has no bearing at all on anything!
Also note there is a law in Georgia that is called -- Party to the crime.....

I'll take what any in the media says as their opinions with a grain of salt. Too often in the past the media has lied blatantly about cases like this. Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Jessie Smolette, and Nick Sandman cases are a few examples of media going crazy on cases that they think have a whiff of racism to talk about.
 
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JEDIYoda

Lifer
Jul 13, 2005
33,986
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Too much of the evidence that has come out since that article has been published "eviscerates" much of what was surmised in that article. That article was posted on the 7th and new evidence released to the public shows much of what this lawyer got wrong. Also of note David French never actually was a courtroom lawyer. Got his degree and was a teacher and then an legal author. Not that what he says can't have merit, just that he has never had to present a legal case in a court of law to win or lose.

Here is the point, there is still more evidence we have not been made aware of yet. I am actually quite surprised by how much has been leaked to the media as Georgia is not like Florida when it comes to publicly releasing all information in an on going case. So we are getting dribbles and what the media wants to spin with that they get to us. Trust me, Benjamin Crump the sleazebag, is in full disinformation media dissemination here like with the Trayvon Martin case. Do you not remember the same media hackery then where the media edited 911 calls, released photos of a 12 year boy instead of a 17 year old young man, or all the other intentional lies released at the time? If you don't think that the media is not intentionally trying to skew the information in this case as well I don't know what to tell you.

I will also note, that there are several police, judges, and lawyers in other articles contradicting points David French is making in that article. I want to also note, that you know people in the legal system aren't the ones capable of knowing the law, that actually our justice system is based on regular people "aka peers" interpreting the law to decide upon guilt.
ok!! We get it!! You believe the assassination was justified! We get it!
You truly desire the facts to show that these two vigilantes were justified in their actions!
While on the other end of the spectrum there are those of us who are sick and tired of the blatant way that law enforcement approaches white people as opposed to people of color differently!!
 

HumblePie

Lifer
Oct 30, 2000
14,665
440
126
ok!! We get it!! You believe the assassination was justified! We get it!
You truly desire the facts to show that these two vigilantes were justified in their actions!
While on the other end of the spectrum there are those of us who are sick and tired of the blatant way that law enforcement approaches white people as opposed to people of color differently!!

I really have to ask. Is someone paying you for these posts? I am having a really difficult time believing that you make posts like this in good conscience. Maybe you are a bot? I really am quite curious to how someone can just keep doubling down on the same stuff over and over despite evidence to the contrary already posted in this thread. I haven't justified anything about what the McMichaels did and only talked about the legal actions of the case thus far, and have only speculated legal actions that may be taken in the future. You still are on a tirade to paint anyone that doesn't call this lynching of a completely innocent minority by American Nazis as being American Supremicist Nazis as well just because they don't post the same way you do. I can only think you are being paid for this or are a bot. Maybe you have some mental issues I am unaware of? I am trying to figure this out.
 
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HomerJS

Lifer
Feb 6, 2002
38,238
31,103
136
Umm there is a bit more info on that. Greg, the father and previous cop, had dealings with Arbery in the past. He was the one to investigate him for shop lifting in 2018 and knew about his prior records which included a weapons charge when he brought a gun to a high school basketball game. This wasn't Greg's first encounter with Arbery we now know. Greg had been part of the facebook page in dealing with people coming into the area and stealing stuff or moving things around at the very least.

What is going to be argued in court is if those past incidents would lead a normal person, as Greg was a civilian at the time, to reasonably believe Arbery had stolen something when they saw him trespassing again, or was casing the place with the intent to steal in the future. That is going to be a key factor in if the McMichaels get off without any guilty verdict. If it was reasonable for a person with their knowledge to believe Arbery had committed a felony at the time and may have been armed, then they are really protected by the Citizens Arrest statute. Meaning they'll get off without any charges sticking.
In what world are any of these evidence a crime was committed except in a world where you want to nail this guy for something?

Investigated for something else is reasonable suspicion of a crime? Or is that the black people standard??
 

ewdotson

Golden Member
Oct 30, 2011
1,295
1,520
136
Which means it protects for both bars of legal justification.

I hate the misnaming bit about calling it Citizen's Arrest, because it is more or less Citizen's Detaining. Citizen's still aren't arresting people, cuffing them, or reading them their rights. They are just detaining them until the cops arrive. Shop keepers do this all the time for people they suspect of shoplifting. It is meant for the lesser bar for this reason. If an associate witnesses what they think is shoplifting, or behavior that looks like it, they can report to the manager and the manager can detain the person. The manager does NOT need to witness the suspected behavior nor actually have probable cause to detain someone for law enforcement.
Shoplifting has its own special rules. Note that shopkeeper's *can't* detain a customer accused of a crime against another patron if they didn't directly observe it.
The alleged crime was not committed in the presence or within the immediate knowledge of Arrowood or any other employee of appellant, and thus Arrowood and other employees of appellant were not legally authorized to arrest the alleged criminals. OCGA § 17-4-60. Indeed, the only person who could have effected a citizen's arrest was appellee herself because she was the only person who "by the exercise of any of [her] senses. . . ha[d] knowledge of *311 [the crime's] commission. [Cit.]" Johnson v. Jackson, 140 Ga. App. 252, 257 (230 SE2d 756) (1976). Nothing in OCGA § 51-7-60 suggests that a merchant is authorized to detain or arrest persons accused by business patrons of committing crimes against the patrons, since that statute expressly involves only the limited right of a merchant to detain or arrest a person reasonably believed to have committed the offense of shoplifting as defined in OCGA § 16-8-14.
 

HomerJS

Lifer
Feb 6, 2002
38,238
31,103
136
I'll take what any in the media says as their opinions with a grain of salt. Too often in the past the media has lied blatantly about cases like this. Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Jessie Smolette, and Nick Sandman cases are a few examples of media going crazy on cases that they think have a whiff of racism to talk about.
I'll bite since you accused the media of "lying" in cases like this.

What did the media "lie" about in the Martin case?
What did the media "lie" about in the Smollet case?

By lie I mean the media put out a fact they knew was false or put out a fact with no evidence.
 

HumblePie

Lifer
Oct 30, 2000
14,665
440
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Shoplifting has its own special rules. Note that shopkeeper's *can't* detain a customer accused of a crime against another patron if they didn't directly observe it.


The whole within immediate knowledge part of the statute is arguable. Once she told the manager of the store he was immediately knowledgeable of crime just committed. While the manager has no duty to perform any action, saying he couldn't take action at that moment isn't quite right either. Otherwise schools couldn't take actions when one student reports being bullied by another student. There are so many other examples of someone being able to affect a citizen's arrest without having been direct witness to the crime, but became aware of it later than just the shoplifting one. Once made aware of the crime at the moment to be able to still make a citizen's arrest is to have immediate knowledge of the criminal act. The Winn-Dixie case is more of an example that just because someone that isn't a duly sworn officer of the law knows about a crime, they aren't required to do anything about it. Which wasn't the argument Nichols was making. It was that they failed to provide adequate security and protection to prevent crimes such as what happened from occurring. That is a hard argument to make.
 
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