On Jan 15, 1998 07:08pm, RD THOMPSON wrote to RICH GRIEBEL:
RT> Hi RICH, as you were just saying about Re: Home Security....
RG>> RT> I want everyone to be judged the same (if that is possible). That
RG>> RT> means that the same laws apply to me that apply to law enforcement
RG>> and
RG>> RT> vice versa. I cannot speak for the local policies that are set by
RG>> RT> one's employer whether private or public.
RG>>
RG>> People held to be "professionals" are always held to a
RG>> higher standard, both in
RT> I understand what you are saying and there are very narrow
RT> differences. I was making a general statement. BTW, as you mentioned,
RT> EMT, nurse or doctor is held to a different standard under *those*
RT> conditions. They should not be held to a different standard under
RT> other conditions.
Thats what makes the world go 'round. People have expectations of others
hat
they consider professionals based on their training. And they will be held
o
that standard without regard to any conditions that are present.
RG>> Same goes if you sit in court and watch how a Judge handles people
RG>> defending themselves vs. Attorney's defending them. They tend to
RT> Difference in expectation. The judge just wants to make sure that the
RT> money spent on that law college education wasn't *all* spent on beer
RT> and wild parties.
Sometimes I wonder about that myself :).
RG>> When I hire a plumber, he'd better be doing the job right, or
RG>> he'll hear from me. If my neighbor comes over and offers to help me
RG>> fix the problem, then I have to realize that I'm taking my chances
RG>> instead of calling a professional.
RG>>
RG>> Way life goes...
RT> Yep, but do you think that the law in general should treat your
RT> plumber differently than your neighbor?
Through sitting in court and listening to civil hearings prior to traffic
court
starting, yep, seen it many times. You have to take responsibility for your
own judgement, you call you neighbor and he helps, and the job is screwed up,
the court will say, you should have called a plumber.
The best case I can remember was in 1970, when I was a truck driver. One
night, at the Lucky Food loading dock two teenagers were trying to steal a
ox
of lettuce. An armed security guard intervened and a scuffle ensued. Those
of
us on the far end of the dock started that way, but before we could get
here,
the teens managed to knock down the security guard and began to run. The
security guard pulled out his pistol and ordered them to stop, one of the
teens, still holding a head of lettuce, threw it at the guard. The guard
hot
and killed the teen. The Prosecution in the case tried the guard for
manslaughter, the jury brought back a verdict of guilty of involuntary
manslaughter (an allowable option under the court instructions). Reason
eing
the guard did not have the same training as a Police Officer with regard to
shoot, don't shoot policy and law, so he didn't have the knowledge to make a
proper decision.
... Kendra.com - Internet for $14.95 a month
--- Platinum Xpress/Win/Wildcat5! v2.0
---------------
* Origin: Kendra Communications, Everett WA (1:343/304)
|