TheLastSacrifice
Student
- Feb 14, 2020
- 174
Has anyone heard of some dumb law in the states where my friends could get into trouble for knowing I had plans to ctb?
Meghans law is a sex offender thing iircHas anyone heard of some dumb law in the states where my friends could get into trouble for knowing I had plans to ctb?
Yeah if I remember right this gal was malicious towards her boyfriend and told him that he should just kill himself.
If we're talking about the US I'm fairly sure your friends could only get in trouble if they were healthcare professionals. Although that might only extend to while they're "on duty". In the US I think the prevailing theory is you can't get in trouble for not preventing a crime/tort committed by someone else. Suicide is a crime in most places. But for more serious crimes I would be surprised if they tried sticking a conspiracy charge on somebody who knew something was about to happen. I doubt that with suicide though. However, if your friends encouraged/assisted it and there was documented evidence of that, or they admitted that, then yeah there would obviously be trouble for them.
Destruction of State Property is a crime. *Which is why It's illegalI don't understand how suicide is a crime. If you attempt suicide and succeed....well you're dead so there is nobody to charge with that crime. However if you try to suicide and fail, well I've never heard of anyone being charged for attempting suicide and failing.
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Has anyone heard of some dumb law in the states where my friends could get into trouble for knowing I had plans to ctb?
I don't understand how suicide is a crime.
You don't get always charged for every crime you commit, if you get charged for attempted suicide there was probably something else going. Down in New Zealand where I'm originally from i did see it several times in the news that somebody was charged with attempted suicide.I don't understand how suicide is a crime. If you attempt suicide and succeed....well you're dead so there is nobody to charge with that crime. However if you try to suicide and fail, well I've never heard of anyone being charged for attempting suicide and failing.
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"On the suicide front they need to assist or help commit suicide (inc being emotionally supportive of ctb)."Just knowing is not enough .On the suicide front they need to assist or help commit suicide (inc being emotionally supportive of ctb).
On the general negligence side they need to be in position to provide significant help in order to be negligent. Some states have strong negligence laws, but rarely used. Authorities won't pursue unless clear evidence. Civil law may be used by vindictive family members to harass etc (but with little result).
If they knew of imminent danger (exact when and how) and did nothing -- they may be investigated.
It has been discussed in several threads, but can't find right now, maybe you will :)
* Duty to Care = Professionals
* Duty to Help/Rescue = you saw a man dying and did nothing (not even called ambulance). Usually serious accidents when one flees the scene.
I actually understand that from the judicial perspective , to minimize damage and potential harm . A person can be in a position to be very supportive of another suicidal person tendencies , without any coercion or encouragement , and that could be very well 'wrong' sometimes . There's "more safe than sorry" angle to that . But obviously it is motivated by a strong pro-life anti-ctb position ."On the suicide front they need to assist or help commit suicide (inc being emotionally supportive of ctb)."
That is so fucked up
We live in a pretty evil society if that's the case
What a nightmareI actually understand that from the judicial perspective , to minimize damage and potential harm . A person can be in a position to be very supportive of another suicidal person tendencies , without any coercion or encouragement , and that could be very well 'wrong' sometimes . There's "more safe than sorry" angle to that . But obviously it is motivated by a strong pro-life anti-ctb position .
The fact that you cannot be there when someone ctb just to support them , yeah , that's really fucked up Other than peaceful end , it's the one thing I would have really wanted . And it's so basic ..
To make that point a bit finer I think that in most cases (probably outside US) officers will choose not investigate such cases , out of empathy (especially with the elderly rather then 'the depressed' etc) . But then again there's the British-Dignitas case -- where the wife accompanying husband to Switzerland was investigated as "helping" -- despite CPS guidelines against that! Messy stuff .