Not really sure what to put here…I usually put relevant excerpts, but that got this post deleted for doing that

  • @Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    -11 year ago

    You don’t get to break into a car and rehome the baby or dog. They trespassed, broke in, and stole property. If they don’t like the practice, laws, or enforcement of existing laws there are legal ways to change those things. Vigilante Justice isn’t the answer and this criminal isn’t innocent of any of the crimes he’s been found guilty of.

    You can find the practice of the slaughter house reprehensible and still maintain a life as a functional law abiding citizen while working towards progress at the same time.

    • TWeaK
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      61 year ago

      They trespassed, broke in, and stole property.

      And yet, the prosecutors here explicitly dropped the charges for breaking and entering and theft. They only went for trespass.

      This is because they successfully argued against the other crimes in other trials, and convinced juries that the animals weren’t actually worth anything because they were dead or half dead.

      The prosecution intentionally went for the weakest charge, then inflated it into a federal charge, and the judge intentionally didn’t let them defend against it. That reeks of collusion, and a disgustingly biased judge.

      The practice of slaughtering isn’t at issue here. The issue is the welfare of the animals while they’re alive.

      this criminal isn’t innocent of any of the crimes he’s been found guilty of.

      He did not plead innocent to the crime. He admitted to doing the thing that was a statutory offense. However, in fair court proceedings, you should be allowed to give “special reasons” - that is, you should be allowed to present to the court that it was necessary to cause a lesser harm in order to prevent a greater harm. If the court had considered this and ruled against him, that would be one thing, but they didn’t even allow anyone to listen to that argument. That makes the ruling objectively wrong.