« First « Previous Comments 62 - 101 of 243 Next » Last » Search these comments
Do you go to somebody else's neighborhood to "look around" at construction sites?
I'm trying to figure out what planet most of you Patnetters are from because on my planet it's pretty normal to walk through a house that is under construction and look around. My wife and I do it all the time in my neighborhood near downtown Orlando. Also, I've never seen any expensive tools lying around an unsecured construction site just the occasional screwdriver or putty knife. The guys that I know that work construction keep their tools locked in their truck storage compartments.
Citizen's Arrests are 100% legal according to Georgia Law, if you catch somebody in the middle of committing a crime.
iWineHorror1 saysCan you show me where a gun was pointed at him please?
You can't shoot someone if the gun isn't pointed at someone.
Why do you suppose Arbery attacked an armed man?
Even if the dude was legit out for a run, his first action that set off a chain reaction was to trespass on someone else's property, which is a crime albeit a minor one and probably shouldn't result in loss of life.
Who is at fault here
Why did the rug get destroyed?
My other dog said I need to get in on this action
The owner of the house had no problem with his being there.
From what I can see, the gun isn't pointed at him until he grabs it. Sooo, he pointed it at himself. What. An. Idiot.
In our neck of woods, it is OK to walk through house being built in your neighborhood. I would not do it in a place I am not familiar with, but in our block or neighboring ones I have done it myself.
Construction workers are generally licensed, bonded and insured.
Especially when we were kids.
IL must have a different reality from TX
the construction workers are picked up under Highway 59 in Houston, where illegals congregate looking for work. Only a few qualified ones actually work for the builder.
The two guys are not what put everything in motion.
they were attempting to maintain civility by enforcing property laws they thought were broken.
If owner would have shot him, that is one thing. If a random other person shoots, then it becomes very different. Just call the damned police and/or owner, if you know him. If you do not know the owner, then how do you know that guy snooping about the house is a criminal and not owner's son-in-law?
In our neck of woods, it is OK to walk through house being built in your neighborhood. I would not do it in a place I am not familiar with, but in our block or neighboring ones I have done it myself.
RC2006 saysThe two guys are not what put everything in motion.
That was kind of my point. If he just kept walking down the street there would have been zero problem. Even if he just stopped and was like shit, those guys got guns. Let me just explain what I was doing. Or just make up some shit, the cops come, you have nothing stolen on you so you explain you were just checking out a vacant house. You get hit with a small fine and move on with your life.
I've been confronted by neighbors and cops a couple dozen times breaking into foreclosed properties at the direction of the bank. Some situations got tense. Never once did I ever think of going after the people confronting me or talking shit back to someone. You deescalate the situation if you're there on legal grounds. If you're not, apparently you run and try to grab a guys gun.
Am I taking crazy pills or something? The w...
Then somehow running from the scene not in his neighborhood, now he is a “jogger”.
We know very little, other than that he checked out a home under construction, which in some peoples books is not a big deal
RC2006 saysThen somehow running from the scene not in his neighborhood, now he is a “jogger”.
You have no idea whether he was running before visiting that house under construction or not. If you were ever a runner you would know it's not unusual to slow down for a walk in the middle of a run.
We know very little, other than that he checked out a home under construction, which in some peoples books is not a big deal. That, and that he started running out of the neighborhood after that. Maybe he had been out for a walk (something a lot of people do these days when your cooped up the rest of the time), and then it changed to a run when he got dirty looks for, you know, being black in the wrong place.
That and the one other thing we know is that a couple of assholes chose to stop him armed to the hilt guns drawn. I don't think we know how that feels in that situation. Maybe he resis...
armed to the hilt guns drawn.
marcus saysWe know very little, other than that he checked out a home under construction, which in some peoples books is not a big deal
It's illegal if uninvited. There's not even an argument to be had at this point. You and anyone disagreeing are 100% wrong. Flat out wrong. He committed a crime regardless of how minor anyone thinks it is, which I do. It was illegal.
WookieMan saysmarcus saysWe know very little, other than that he checked out a home under construction, which in some peoples books is not a big deal
It's illegal if uninvited. There's not even an argument to be had at this point. You and anyone disagreeing are 100% wrong. Flat out wrong. He committed a crime regardless of how minor anyone thinks it is, which I do. It was illegal.
I agree but there's always the principle of a response relative to the threat or crime. One may be able to argue a citizens arrest with arms drawn is not an appropriate response since there was no immediate threat and the extent of the crimes of any was also not established. However 99% would have come out alive of such a situation by not attacking/assaulting the person wanting to talk to you. So I'd call it tragic but mostly ...
Am I taking crazy pills or something? The weapon was legal. If Georgia allows citizen arrests, then the confrontation was legal. The person that was visibly seen entering a property was confronted and decided to go after the people thinking he was there illegally. What am I missing here?
That doesn't mean you take out your gun and start chasing the first black guy you see that is acting curious.
When you live in a community some curious eyes and curious behavior is expected.
WookieMan saysAm I taking crazy pills or something? The weapon was legal. If Georgia allows citizen arrests, then the confrontation was legal. The person that was visibly seen entering a property was confronted and decided to go after the people thinking he was there illegally. What am I missing here?
Visibly entering a construction site doesn't mean anything. I am 40+ year old and I have interest in house construction, whenever there is construction going on in my neighborhood, I stop by and look around multiple times, I talk to construction workers, and sometimes go and in one particular property that was under construction for many months, I often used to stop by and look around at the quality of work. They even had cameras installed and not once was I stopped. My white neighbor has a habit of going around the neighborhood, opening peoples gates, taking their trash cans, and then returni...
I am 40+ year old and I have interest in house construction, whenever there is construction going on in my neighborhood, I stop by and look around multiple times, I talk to construction workers, and sometimes go and in one particular property that was under construction for many months, I often used to stop by and look around at the quality of work.
I've never heard of an adult doing it with no contractors on site. It's trespassing at minimum and most definitely suspicious. White, black, brown, yellow, etc. The only time it's appropriate to even enter someone's yard is to grab a real estate flyer or to knock on the door to present yourself and ask a question if you don't know the owner. Otherwise, just stay on the public easement/sidewalk or the street. Zero reason to enter a random persons property EVER regardless of occupancy. You're only asking for negative outcomes, regardless of who you are.
Trespassing is trespassing though. If the owner didn't explicitly invite Ahmaud, then it's trespassing regardless of whether or not the owner wants/would press charges.
There's really not much else to discuss.
Knowing many of the facts, calling these white dudes racist is racist
Knowing many of the facts, calling these white dudes racist is racist. Why are you a racist? Why do you hate white people for protecting their neighbors?
We are not going to accept your racist comments anymore. Lines are being drawn. If I was on the jury, at this point, I would vote NOT GUILTY.
« First « Previous Comments 62 - 101 of 243 Next » Last » Search these comments
There's not a stand your ground law in the US that will back you, if things get out of hand at that point. In almost every scenario, you'll be the aggressor.
Why did Ahmaud Arbery, grab their gun, the video would have cleared him and he could have sued them later.
It's been rumored he was in boots, and was carrying a hammer, though it's clear he wasn't doing either. The video, shows Ahmaud enter the under construction property. But IMHO, it doesn't look like he's casing the place. Now they don't show the whole video, he could have looked innocent until the video stops. Then he could have been snooping and prowling looking for tools, and scoping out any copper wire. Speculation of course, but why release the video and not show the entire three minutes. What was he doing when he noticed the neighbor across the street calling 9-11 before he bolted out the door?
If he was doing nothing more than what it looked like, it could be argued he was stopping by looking for work. That's how I used to get construction work way way on back in the day. Just show up on the job, and ask if they need help.
It's not looking good for the Good Ole Boys, what's in the rest of the video, and why is Ahmaud so brazen to try to take the gun, rather than the prospect of waiting for the police?
Especially given the lack of will to prosecute these days by Liberal judges, Mayors and DA's.
www.youtube.com/embed/rg8CaecNJI8