figmentPez
Staff member
You're right, that it would end up being tried as a negligent homicide, because of the difficulty of getting murder charges to stick against a police officer. That doesn't mean it fails to meet the legal definition of murder, though. Our justice system has many biases, but the bias of a judge or jury should not change how we read the law, and it certainly shouldn't change our discussion of what is morally or ethically right.Pez has a point that the expectation of a standard of care is higher in the case of custody, but I still feel like it would at most end up being a charge of negligent homicide, still not one of murder.
If the government rules that pizza is a vegetable, you can damn well be sure I'm going to point out that it's not.
For example, the FCC says that ISPs are not telecommunication companies. Their stance, and current legal power, doesn't make this true. For all that laws are often illogical and self-contradictory in practice, that does not mean that they are true, or that would should accept such a state. If a government declares Pi to be 3 exactly, that doesn't actually change the value of Pi, and any engineer or scientist trying to do work would do well to keep that in mind.
I'm fully aware that PatrThom is talking about what a court of law will conclude, but even then he was being disingenuous, and showed no signs of realizing that he was arguing the stance of legal practicality, when Null and I have been explicitly discussing from a stance of morality and ethics.Once again miscommunication in action, really.