- Reaction score
- 6,064
- Points
- 1,160
She would have been arrested, the baby taken into custody of Child Services. She'd be charged with, at minimum, manslaughter. Any guns on the property, and ammo, would be confiscated. She'd be charged for discharging a firearm, unsafe storage of firearms, unsafe storage of ammunition, charges of dangerous to the public safety, reckless endangerment and whatever else the Crown could possibly think of. They maximize the amount of charges to use as plea bargain chips down the line. If it was Ontario, the Attorney General would likely seize all property and assets, as he has done in previous cases. This prevents her from using assets to pay for legal fees. She would be hauled through the legal system fighting and paying every inch of the way. Thousands and thousands of dollars. She'd, in all likelyhood, eventually get off. She'd have no recourse to recoup her property or finances. She'd face a lifetime weapons ban. The legal system, in all likelyhood, would also allow the family of the dead attacker to sue her.
If anyone thinks I'm being alarmist or fantasizing, there are plenty of cases on the books and some currently in process, that follow this template.
In Canada generally, and Ontario especially, the AG and police do not want you to fight back. Their expectation and advice is to call 911, roll up in the fetal position and wait for the police to react and respond.
Remember kiddies, 'When seconds count, the police are only minutes away'
None of this is meant to denigrate the fine job our frontline police do. They have a tough, demanding and thankless job. It's the bureaucracy that is at fault.
The motto shouldn't be 'To Serve and Protect' but to 'Serve and Investigate'
If anyone thinks I'm being alarmist or fantasizing, there are plenty of cases on the books and some currently in process, that follow this template.
In Canada generally, and Ontario especially, the AG and police do not want you to fight back. Their expectation and advice is to call 911, roll up in the fetal position and wait for the police to react and respond.
Remember kiddies, 'When seconds count, the police are only minutes away'
None of this is meant to denigrate the fine job our frontline police do. They have a tough, demanding and thankless job. It's the bureaucracy that is at fault.
The motto shouldn't be 'To Serve and Protect' but to 'Serve and Investigate'