• @catloaf@lemm.ee
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    1126 months ago

    The article conveniently fails to mention whether it was sharp (extremely unlikely, the cheap steel used for these can’t really hold an edge), and even more conveniently crops out the tip of the “blade” so we can’t even see if it was pointed (also extremely unlikely, toys like this almost always have blunted tips).

    This isn’t a weapon, it’s a toy. Sure, you could hurt someone with it, just like you could hurt someone with a baseball bat.

  • @Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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    526 months ago

    victim surcharge of £154.

    WHAT VICTIM??? The article says nothing of him doing anything to others. To my knowledge he didn’t attack anyone. There’s no victim!

    • JohnEdwa
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      6 months ago

      Victims of every crime that has one.
      It’s a fund for paying compensation to victims of crime and £154 is just what you have to pay to it if you get jailed for 6 months or below.

      So when someone does commit a crime that has a payout to a victim, it doesn’t matter if they have money or not as it comes from the fund to the victim first.
      Kinda like… If you got hit with an extra vehicle/traffic insurance bill every time you get a speeding ticket or get caught driving drunk, even if you didn’t cause an accident.

      • @Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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        16 months ago

        Oh, ok. Thats a far better description than the other guy said of just “court costs”.

        I would say that America needs something like that, but, I just can’t see the money ACTUALLY going to victims. I see some policeman, or politician, or whomever, pocketing it if they tried that here.

    • @Fisk400@feddit.nu
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      16 months ago

      I don’t know if this is the same but Sweden have a thing where you pay into a fund that helps victims of crimes. When a criminal gets convicted and has to pay a victim money, the state takes money out of the fund and pay the victim and then the fund tries to get the money from the criminal. This way it doesn’t become the victims problem that the criminal can’t pay.

  • @Robin@lemmy.world
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    406 months ago

    Four months of prison? It sounds like the man is disconnected from reality but hardly a real threat to society.

    • enkers
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      366 months ago

      Seriously. I’ve seen letter openers more threatening than that “sword”. Was it dumb? Sure. Does he deserve a slap the wrist, absolutely. But prison?? No way. What the actual fuck?

      • @Womble@lemmy.world
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        256 months ago

        The stupid thing is that the UK is literally running out of prison spaces currently so that we are considering letting long term prisioners out on licence early to free up room.

        Yet apparently this man needs to have his life turned upsidedown in order to occupy one of those spaces for four months.

        • @Churbleyimyam@lemm.eeOP
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          136 months ago

          The cells are probably crammed full of cosplayers, student protestors and journalists. Remember that massive ruckus and manhunt for thee guy who was wandering around in a gimp suit making people feel uncomfortable?

          “Our prisons have never been safer!”

      • @Churbleyimyam@lemm.eeOP
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        6 months ago

        It’s OK though because as soon as the prison guards turn their backs on him he will immediately escape on an eight inch paraglider.

  • @Deceptichum@quokk.au
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    6 months ago

    With a bit more self-awareness, Bray could have avoided contact with us completely.”

    With a shred of brain matter, Sgt Spellman and the bastards he works with, could have not pursued such a ridiculous “crime”.

        • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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          56 months ago

          True, I’d still give them partial credit for the dumb statement.

          Law says you can’t carry a knife bigger than 3 in. He carries a knife twice that size.

          Does he carry concealed in his pocket?

          No, He’s walking around carrying it openly pretending he’s a blade master, oh sorry that’s he claims it’s a fidget toy.

          4 months in jail seems a bit excessive, but when the law says don’t carry a weapon and you carry a weapon…

  • @VelvetStorm@lemmy.world
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    336 months ago

    In addition to the four months in prison, he was required to pay a victim surcharge of £154.

    So not only was there no victim here but himself he is also now out of work for a minimum of 4 months he’s now out 154 bucks. Fuck this world. Like ya, I get that there is that law for a reason, so sure, maybe give him a fine or better yet community service and then let him be on his way. What they have done benefits no one at all and wastes local resources.

    • JohnEdwa
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      6 months ago

      Victim surcharge is just a fine with another name.
      It goes to a fund that pays compensation for victims of crimes and £154 is just what you have to pay for any crime that results in you getting a jail sentence of 6 months or below.

  • @fulcrummed@lemmy.world
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    326 months ago

    I know people are reacting strongly, prob a large US contingent here and that’s understandable. It is a completely different world in the UK. The police don’t carry firearms (specialist response teams do) as they are just not as available to the general public. Knives or clubs/bats are the most common weapon encountered. Even in that context I too find the sentence pretty heavy on the face of it. The article was rubbish at giving anything other than rage-bait. It didn’t explain if there were circumstances of aggravation, does he have form (ie prior same or related offences), were there vulnerable people in the vicinity, which specific charge was he accused with (possessing or threatening with) did he plead guilty, were there mitigating factors that actually reduced his sentence as the mandatory minimum sentence for “threatening with a weapon” is six months, eg did he cooperate, is he a sole caregiver for someone at home etc.

    Only thing I’ve walked away knowing is the author of the article seemed more interested in provoking outrage and upping their hit count than demonstrating any investigative nous or journalistic integrity.

    • @sin_free_for_00_days@sopuli.xyz
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      146 months ago

      Even though we have the gun nuts all over this fucked up country, we do manage to far outscore the UK on per capita knife crime as well. Yay us. I agree with your take on the motivation for the article.

    • @PsychedSy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      16 months ago

      Nobody called. It was seen on CCTV. So someone saw him playing with his lil’ master sword and decided to fuck him.

      Sometimes, when I’m not careful, I end up with stupid, dangerous UK-legal pocket knives so I’m always going to be critical of your auth bullshit.

  • @jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    306 months ago

    Have police there never heard of a “letter opener”? 🤔

    There’s a reason “zero tolerance” is also called “zero intelligence”.

    • Flying SquidM
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      116 months ago

      Have police there never heard of a “letter opener”? 🤔

      At this point, a significant number of them are young enough to have never opened a letter in their lives, so possibly. But this is still extremely stupid.

  • @Mothra@mander.xyz
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    306 months ago

    Bit draconian hey. I admit the whole thing was stupid but considering he didn’t hurt anyone with this toy or show intention to do so a fine alone would have been more than enough. 4 months prison? Wtf

  • @jafffacakelemmy@mander.xyz
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    286 months ago

    it was only 15cm long. that’s at best a Master Dagger, not a master sword! still too long to be legal to carry out in public though.

    • @hakunawazo@lemmy.world
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      186 months ago

      It may be only a few centimeters, but you know what it could do if fully charged*.

      (*I know, that’s what he said or something)

    • Atelopus-zeteki
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      -96 months ago

      Not for simply having, but for brandishing said bladed device as the police approached. That’s the law, in that city. As the officer said, “It is possible to find fidget toys that aren’t six-inch blades. It is possible not to walk down the street holding them out in front of you. With a bit more self-awareness, Bray could have avoided contact with us completely.” Bray brought this on himself, and could have avoided any contact with the police. He chose otherwise.

      • @FireTower@lemmy.world
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        76 months ago

        Brandish is a stretch nothing in that article noted an intent to intimidate others, it is simple possession of a tchotchke. Unless you count the author’s flavor text.

        • Atelopus-zeteki
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          -46 months ago

          I’m just reading the article, as you were also able to do, and it says, “On 8 June, officers were made aware via CCTV of a man, Bray, walking down Queens Road, Nuneaton, with the sword in his hand. Bray approached officers with the blade visible, at which point he was arrested.” Bold added for emphasis. If I were out in public in the UK, and if I happened to have a bladed implement, I’d keep it out of sight. Especially if there were police anywhere nearby. But hey, you can do as you please. Have a nice day!

          • @FireTower@lemmy.world
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            146 months ago

            The blade was inside a sheath and could be released from the sheath with the press of a button.

            And approached could simply be he was intent on walking past them on the sidewalk.

  • @Pacattack57@lemmy.world
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    216 months ago

    Just to be clear this was not in the US. Their weapons laws are way more restrictive then ours. Apparently he was brandishing it and approached police with it. Sounds like he is a moron.

        • AwesomeLowlander
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          26 months ago

          6 inches divided by 2 is 3 inches. Not far off from the 2.5" toothpicks I see frequently in Asia. YMMV re American toothpicks.

          • @stephen01king@lemmy.zip
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            16 months ago

            Oh, the article said 6 inches. I was going by what you said, which was 20 cm. That is closer to 8 inches.

            If it’s 6 inches, your comment made much more sense.

            • AwesomeLowlander
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              16 months ago

              Ah. Probably the difference between the length of the thing entire and the length of the blade alone.

      • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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        36 months ago

        That’s way longer. 20cm is the average blade length for chef’s knives. Over here in Germany, with way more liberal knife laws: Legal to own (duh) but also very much not legal to carry much less wield in public unless you have a good reason – like actually preparing food in public. You can transport that kind of thing without fanfare but transporting very much involves not having it at the ready.

        Four months are still completely overkill, though. Impounding and maybe a week’s worth of fine (one day of disposable income == one day in prison here) if he was being stupid and careless but non-aggressive. Four months go way beyond “let this be a lesson” territory and very much into “the state is nuts and doesn’t make sense”. If you’re feeling poetic, how about some social hours in a charity store sorting donated fidget spinners.

        • AwesomeLowlander
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          26 months ago

          That’s 20 cm including the hilt. Roughly 15 cm for the blade by itself. And about 1 cm thick. Most likely with no sharp edge to speak of, since it was a toy and I’m sure the dumbass police would have made a point of it if it had.

          In other words, ‘wielding’ it in public is about as threatening as carrying a particularly stiff twig. Probably less, considering the size of the hilt.

          • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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            -36 months ago

            15cm is still 3cm more than what’s allowed to carry without good reason. Replica or sharp doesn’t matter in this context because the question isn’t whether you could hurt someone but whether the public might worry you’re going to hurt someone. You could reasonably argue that it has toy colours and therefore doesn’t count as replica but looking at the image you’re relying a lot on goodwill, there.

            Also, a particularly stiff twig is a blunt weapon. You’re not supposed to run around with broomsticks if you’re not doing any actual sweeping, either. Or hang out in an dim underpass with baseball bats unless you’re an actual baseball player and are waiting for the train to your game or something.

            • @locuester@lemmy.zip
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              56 months ago

              You’re not supposed to run around with broomsticks if you’re not doing any actual sweeping, either. Or hang out in a dim underpass with baseball bats unless you’re an actual baseball player and are waiting for the train to your game or something.

              Wow. Yeah glad we don’t have that ridiculousness in the USA. I’ll spend the day celebrating revolting against that tyrannical attitude.

              • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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                -46 months ago

                Do you currently spend your day celebrating revolting against even a fraction of the BS you’re exposed to? Not willing to even protest against the various injustices in your country, but your right to be a mall ninja, that is where you draw the line?

                Lay down your neckbeard, trenchcoat, fedora, and katana, good sir, and have some perspective. Like, arm the homeless or something.

                • @locuester@lemmy.zip
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                  46 months ago

                  Ok friend. I was being cute. Today is our Independence Day so I made that last sentence.

                  I’m a recovered alcoholic with 11 years sober next month. I’ve lived on the streets before. Slept in gutters. I spend a lot of time working with the homeless and addiction community now. That’s my biggest fight.

                  That said, yes, I’ll defend a mall ninjas right to carry painted toothpicks or katanas all the same.

  • @Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    MASTER SWORD = 22 cm or 8.6 inches including handle and holster.
    We also have very strict knife regulation here (Denmark), but I think if it is a first time offense, he would have gotten off with a fine, since it’s obviously a toy.

    Seems like a perfect place for role playing games!
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warwickshire#/media/File:Kenilworth_Castle_(cropped).jpg

    Wiki page:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warwickshire

    • sunzu
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      26 months ago

      What is the aim of the regulation?

      Does it cover dense urban areas only?

      • @Churbleyimyam@lemm.eeOP
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        36 months ago

        Most youths who are involved in crime carry a knife for protection. This means that if the police want to arrest one of them, for whatever reason, they can because they will likely find a knife on them.

        • sunzu
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          16 months ago

          I see. Is this pure fear behind it or is there some evidence that the law is beneficial?

          But yeah, another good pretext for harassing the young and/or poors.

          Reminds of war on drugs until police started doing to the all “children” in the US and that attitude changed pretty quick.

    • @Snowclone@lemmy.world
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      16 months ago

      That’s what all these articles missed, this isn’t a first offense, the man is a known burglar, did 4 years previously