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Irish law on self defence

  • 21-07-2006 5:15pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 885 ✭✭✭


    I always wondered what the law on self defence is here in Ireland. Say I was to be attacked on the street by a scumbag. Have I the right to fight back to the point of putting him in hospital? What would happen if I fought back and accadently killed the other guy? Would I be in trouble in these situations? Have I even the right to fight back at all?


«1

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,187 ✭✭✭✭Sangre


    Of course you can fight back. You don't even have to wait for the first attack because verbal intimidation is assault. You're able to do what is reasonable to avoid bodily harm. If incapicating (knocking him out) him is seen by the jury as reasonable then you're ok.

    Juries are usually pretty lenient when it comes to self-defence, they always think 'what if it was me?'. But remember it must be reasonable. A huge boxer doesn't need to beat a small man into a coma to escape harm.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,062 ✭✭✭dermot_sheehan


    Irish law allows for the use of force in reasonable circumstances as a person believes them to be, as permitted by s.18 of the Non-Fatal Offences Against the Person Act for protection of self, others or property or by s. 19 for the effect of an arrest. This applies an objective statutory test with subjective perception of circumstances so allows for someone's mistake as to facts.

    I believe there is debate as to whether these statutory provisions apply when you kill someone in self defence, because although the sections don't limit themselves to non-homicide situations, it's part of an act entitled the "non-fatal offences against the person".

    In any case Irish Common law allows for reasonable force to be used in self defence which would be in addition to these statutory provisions and would certainly cover when self defence results in homicide. Irish law adopts the reductive approach as per People v. Kealty. What this means is if you thought the force was reasonable, and the jury thought objectively the force was reasonable you get an acquittal. However if you honestly thought the force was reasonable but the jury thinks it was objectively unreasonable you get convicted of manslaughter. If however the jury do not believe you honestly thought the force was reasonable you are convicted of murder.

    In using self defence, there is a duty to retreat if this is practicable (R. v. Palmer), for example if you were assaulted in the street and you used self defence, and then circumstances arose where you could safely retreat but chose not to and continued to attack the assailant you would be liable for assault. This duty to retreat however doesn't apply to force used against an unlawful entrant when you are in your own home. (This exception to the duty to retreat is called the castle doctrine, your home is your castle)

    Case law (don't have it to hand) also holds that you can not use self defence if you created the situation where violence was employed. (For example you steal from someone, he then strikes out at you, you can not use self defence). Similarly an illegally held weapon (an illegally held firearm or knife in a public area) can not be used in self defence. For example you walk about streets with a knife, someone mugs you, and you stab them, you would be liable for assault causing harm (they would be liable for robbery), since you were carrying an illegal weapon.

    Self defence is an affirmative defence, you must raise it with prima facie evidence, then the state must disprove it beyond reasonable doubt to convict.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 885 ✭✭✭clearz


    Thanks for the replys. Gabhain that clears everything up for me. OK then i'm off to beat some scumbag to death.:p:D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1 bigdave95


    whats the law on mace or pepper-spray?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,632 ✭✭✭Aint Eazy Being Cheezy


    bigdave95 wrote: »
    whats the law on mace or pepper-spray?

    Illegal


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,062 ✭✭✭walrusgumble


    In similarish vein to Section 18 there is now the Self Defence and the Dwelling Act 2011 (not the correct citation), and the interesting Supreme Court Case (Hardiman J in particular) of DPP v Barnes


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,554 ✭✭✭Pat Mustard


    In any case Irish Common law allows for reasonable force to be used in self defence which would be in addition to these statutory provisions and would certainly cover when self defence results in homicide. Irish law adopts the reductive approach as per People v. Kealty. What this means is if you thought the force was reasonable, and the jury thought objectively the force was reasonable you get an acquittal. However if you honestly thought the force was reasonable but the jury thinks it was objectively unreasonable you get convicted of manslaughter. If however the jury do not believe you honestly thought the force was reasonable you are convicted of murder.

    What is your opinion on this from the Criminal Law (Defence and the Dwelling) Act 2011?:
    s.2(4) It is immaterial whether a belief is justified or not if it is honestly held but in considering whether the person using the force honestly held the belief, the court or the jury, as the case may be, shall have regard to the presence or absence of reasonable grounds for the person so believing and all other relevant circumstances.

    Given a home invasion situation, if a householder (fearing for his life) kills an intruder with an honestly held but unreasonable belief - but with certain reasonable grounds and certain excusing circumstances.

    It looks like the legislation is framed to provide a full defence to a homicide charge in that particular situation. Is that correct?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,455 ✭✭✭krd


    Sangre wrote: »
    Of course you can fight back. You don't even have to wait for the first attack because verbal intimidation is assault. You're able to do what is reasonable to avoid bodily harm. If incapicating (knocking him out) him is seen by the jury as reasonable then you're ok.


    You are not safe. I was on Talbot street, and I saw two Chinese guys in a internet cafe throw a drunk and violent scumbag out. When he was kicked out, he started swinging at the two Chinese guys, they swung back. I was there the whole time - I saw everything. Then the guards turn up. Out of the crowd on the street who hadn't seen anything - wide eyed knackers were flocking to tell the guards that the Chinese guys had attacked your man for no reason.

    The reality, if you're attacked by some junkies, and you fight back - you'll have "witnesses" claim you initiated the attack, and if you seriously hurt or kill them (which is not difficult as they're in terrible health), you could face the prospect of being convicted for murder.

    There was a conviction of Chinese man recently for killing a junkie in the city centre. His response may have sounded excessive, but they're getting this crap nearly every day. There is violence in shops in the city centre all the time. Not in Brown Thomas - but internet cafes on Talbot street, yes.
    Juries are usually pretty lenient when it comes to self-defence, they always think 'what if it was me?'.

    You only get the 'what if it was me?' from a judge and jury who are thinking 'look he's one of us'. If you're from a good family, and have some little monopoly in the aviation business, then of course you were just defending yourself. If on the other hand, you're not a fortunate son, then they may see you as violent dangerous thug who is incapable of self-restraint (that class of people just can't control themselves), who needs locking up for a long time for the good of society.
    But remember it must be reasonable. A huge boxer doesn't need to beat a small man into a coma to escape harm.

    This is another rough twist. A trained boxer cannot help themselves from hitting very hard when they are trying to defend themselves. It's not fair to expect the boxer to somehow remember to punch lightly.

    Someone I know, they had been in the British armed forces - so they had been trained. They were standing outside a pub in England. A homeless drunk, someone who was a local nuisance, clipped them in the back of the ear. He turned, and reflexively punched. He knocked the drunk cold - ambulance and police called. They guy I knew ended up with a six month suspended sentence. The whole attack was caught on the pubs security camera - the drunk was doing this nuisance stuff all the time. But the judge decided one punch was excessive.

    The whole excessive force business is very tricky. Someone breaks into your house, you injure or kill them, you will be dragged through the courts.

    On the other hand, I know someone who was attacked in their own home, and nearly killed, disturbing a burglary, their was a failure to prosecute the attackers - even though one burglar was injured and incapacitated at the scene (he ran into a sliding patio door in his effort to escape).

    If you have to defend yourself, you have to defend yourself - but you cannot count on being safe from prosecution if you do.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,333 ✭✭✭Zambia


    krd wrote: »


    You are not safe. I was on Talbot street, and I saw two Chinese guys in a internet cafe throw a drunk and violent scumbag out. When he was kicked out, he started swinging at the two Chinese guys, they swung back. I was there the whole time - I saw everything. Then the guards turn up. Out of the crowd on the street who hadn't seen anything - wide eyed knackers were flocking to tell the guards that the Chinese guys had attacked your man for no reason.

    The reality, if you're attacked by some junkies, and you fight back - you'll have "witnesses" claim you initiated the attack, and if you seriously hurt or kill them (which is not difficult as they're in terrible health), you could face the prospect of being convicted for murder.

    There was a conviction of Chinese man recently for killing a junkie in the city centre. His response may have sounded excessive, but they're getting this crap nearly every day.
    What was that case and when?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,455 ✭✭✭krd




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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1 Maximus0007


    Well the first rule in all these situations is ensure that you survive the encounter! You can worry about the legal ramifications once you have achieved that. Revenging yourself or continuing to batter a person long after they have ceased being a threat is going to be difficult to sell to a jury of your peers! Generally if possible avoid the situation; if that's not an option then ensure your the last man standing otherwise the legal issues are likely to be the least of your concerns!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,333 ✭✭✭Zambia


    krd wrote: »
    Thanks but in this case he has exceeded a reasonable self defence in spades you cant kick a man to death in that fashion.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,224 ✭✭✭Procrastastudy


    Zambia wrote: »
    Thanks but in this case he has exceeded a reasonable self defence in spades you can kick a man to death in that fashion.

    I'm not sure a plea of self defence would be appropriate anyway. It the accused intimated the encounter. Curious as to why this wasn't manslaughter though.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,455 ✭✭✭krd


    Zambia wrote: »
    Thanks but in this case he has exceeded a reasonable self defence in spades you can kick a man to death in that fashion.

    I know in the cold light of day - to the genteel folk of the well secured Green Zone - the actions of Zhen Dong Zhao, could seem excessive. But these people consider the actions of a being in an abstract sense - not of the actions of that being-in-the-world. Or the nature of that world. They judge them in the terms of their world - as if Zhen Dong Zhao was running a knitwear shop in Avoca, and not a scuzzy internet cafe in the hood.

    I have seen the dogs abuse these Chinese guys have to put up with every single day - death threats and racist abuse. The junkies are trying it on all the time - create a disturbance - paralyse them with fear so they can do a smash and grab of those I-phones. In this context, self-defense becomes more of a rolling strategy than a single event in the abstract. Giving a junky a good kicking over 70c is a good prophylactic against the junky returning a few days later, with his friends and HIV blood filled syringes, set on robbing the shop. Within its' context, Zhen Dong Zhao acted in self-defense. He had no intention of killing Noel Fegan - he just ineptly rained what turned out to be fatal blows on his head - where maybe he should have used a less immediately lethal form of physical education, such as ankle stamps and kidney kicks.

    Noel Fegan, was a 40 year-old junky sleeping rough. He did not, as they say, have a bright future ahead of him. Had the encounter with Zhen Dong Zhao not happened, he would be either dead by now, or in the very near future - in a cold snap, after some bad gear. Suburban "liberals" may wring their hands at the brutal fashion in which he died.....But he was going to die brutally anyhow - a silent and convenient death, they would have more complicity in than Zhen Dong Zhao's actions, which were a bad judgment call, where their complicity has the same uncaring precision and indifference as Auschwitz, Belsen or even Treblinka.

    They come around early - before the shoppers and office staff start their day. They find them cold and stiff - they scoop them off the street, into a body bag, and zip it up, to spare the gentle souls the horror.

    It is Vietnam down there, I tell you. Gooks on the wire 24/7, Garda helicopters in the air, watching your buddies die face down in the mud, Jimi Hendrix on fizzy cassette decks, strains of the Doors slow two note bass signature rise, and that guitar run, "This is the end...beautiful friend, thee end"....The violent junky scumbags of the inner city are not signatories to the Geneva Convention. How can you maintain order, how can you win a war, with one arm tied behind your back.

    The horror......The horror.....

    The horror

    The horror


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,333 ✭✭✭Zambia


    Okaaaaaaaay ........ He would have died anyway is not a defence


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,880 ✭✭✭Hippo


    Zambia wrote: »
    Okaaaaaaaay ........ He would have died anyway is not a defence

    Honestly, don't even bother!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,554 ✭✭✭Pat Mustard


    krd wrote: »
    It is Vietnam down there, I tell you. Gooks on the wire 24/7, Garda helicopters in the air, watching your buddies die face down in the mud, Jimi Hendrix on fizzy cassette decks, strains of the Doors slow two note bass signature rise, and that guitar run, "This is the end...beautiful friend, thee end"....The violent junky scumbags of the inner city are not signatories to the Geneva Convention. How can you maintain order, how can you win a war, with one arm tied behind your back.

    The horror......The horror.....

    The horror

    The horror

    Colonel Kurtz, is that you?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,695 ✭✭✭✭NIMAN


    With the increasing amount of house break-ins these days, I was wondering what the situation would be if you got yourself a baseball bat and had it by your bed, and ended up using it on an intruder?

    Would you get done because you had already armed yourself with a weapon, and almost prepared for dishing out a beating?
    Or would you get off beating a guy with it cos he broke into your home and you could claim self defence?

    I guess it may come down to how badly you beat him.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,224 ✭✭✭Procrastastudy


    NIMAN wrote: »
    With the increasing amount of house break-ins these days, I was wondering what the situation would be if you got yourself a baseball bat and had it by your bed, and ended up using it on an intruder?

    Would you get done because you had already armed yourself with a weapon, and almost prepared for dishing out a beating?
    Or would you get off beating a guy with it cos he broke into your home and you could claim self defence?

    I guess it may come down to how badly you beat him.

    What statistics are you using? I can only find crime stats upto 2007.

    That aside there's absolutely no reason you couldn't be a baseball fan. I'd suggest taking the more civilised approach and having a cricket bat or indeed a hurley. :pac:

    It comes down to reasonable force. 90% of burglars are going to leg-it bat or no bat. I really wish people wouldn't do this American thing of perpetuating the false idea we live under siege. The laws in this country are pretty fair to all parties - proportionality is key. The last thing we need is people suggesting we all carry side arms - which is ultimately where you end up when you start allowing people to use leathal force to defend there collection of CDs.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,455 ✭✭✭krd


    Zambia wrote: »
    Okaaaaaaaay ........ He would have died anyway is not a defence

    No, it's not really a good defense. But it does effect the context. If you've noticed, junkies tend to have perpetual wounds - cuts, bruises, broken legs. This is because they are constantly fighting with each other, getting the odd beating from Chinese shop keepers, and occasionally pushing each other head first under the wheel of a bus.

    They engage in behaviour that either cumulatively or on some occasions, instantaneously leads to their untimely demise.

    The newspaper reports really distort the event - some make no mention of the fact that Noel Fegan did strike Zhen Dong Zhao. One newspaper quotes an acquaintance as saying Noel had never been in trouble. The man had been addicted to heroin for over a decade, he had been living on the streets. Of course he was in constant trouble.

    Zhen Dong Zhao, obviously as he's in jail, had a poor defense. Was Noel Fegan's lifestyle and behaviour a major contributing factor in his death. If that is so, it reduces Zhen Dong Zhao's culpability.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,455 ✭✭✭krd



    It comes down to reasonable force. 90% of burglars are going to leg-it bat or no bat. I really wish people wouldn't do this American thing of perpetuating the false idea we live under siege.

    We do not all live under siege. But it depends on where you are living or trying to run your business. If you are in an area of high anti-social behaviour, you are under siege. It's not paranoia. People like Nancy Lanza, living in a well secured wealthy American suburb, that is paranoia.

    Without going into hundreds of anecdotes, and naming places, there are people living under siege. The world is not all sitting in a pub in Dalkey, in your jumper, enjoying a few pints with your golfing pals....talking about boating in Youghal.

    The siege is stressful. And it can lead to condition that is related to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: hyper-vigilance. This is a state where you are on a constant look out for danger - you react to strange sounds as if they mean danger. Psychologically you are in a position where you believe you are facing real imminent existential threats.
    The laws in this country are pretty fair to all parties - proportionality is key.

    In the instance where excessive force is used, you have to ask why excessive force has been used.

    A few years back, a neighbourhood watch foot patrol, in west Dublin, came across someone known to them as a career burglar walking down their street. They bludgeoned him to death - I don't know if anyone was prosecuted.

    Now, why did these very ordinary people just beat a man to death. I would say hypervigilance. The reason they had a foot patrol in the first place is they were blighted by burglaries - committed by people who did not live that far away. To the extent they knew the names and faces of these people.

    They didn't beat him to death to save their CD collections - I believe it was the constant heightened stress of repeatedly being burgled. The force they used was extremely excessive. Like Zhen Dong Zhao, they may have had no intention of killing him, but they were in a state where they would naturally use excessive force. So, there is a diminished responsibility there.

    Convincing a judge and jury might be difficult, but I think a defense for Zhen Dong Zhao excessive and lethal use of force would be hypervigilance. The guys in those shops are getting constant aggravation. (and no, it's nothing like working in BT2 in Dunlaoghaire, with some Sorcha giving you lip.) The first or second time they may react reasonably, after the 100th time, you're in a state to kick a junky in the head until he's dead, over a slap in the face.
    The last thing we need is people suggesting we all carry side arms - which is ultimately where you end up when you start allowing people to use leathal force to defend there collection of CDs.

    The America situation is, you are far more likely to shoot your own teenager, who's sneaking back in after being out late, than you will shoot a burglar.

    Nancy Lanza collected guns and trained her son in the use of them, as she believed society was on the verge of collapse. Nancy was going to be prepared - at least she thought so.

    The killer awoke before dawn,
    he put his boots on.
    He took a face from the ancient gallery.

    And he walked on down the hall.


  • Site Banned Posts: 107 ✭✭big_joe_joyce


    clearz wrote: »
    I always wondered what the law on self defence is here in Ireland. Say I was to be attacked on the street by a scumbag. Have I the right to fight back to the point of putting him in hospital? What would happen if I fought back and accadently killed the other guy? Would I be in trouble in these situations? Have I even the right to fight back at all?


    all depends on the kind of judge you meet in court

    i was assaulted by an intruder on my own property several years ago , the fight was pretty harmless , i got a black eye , i merely rugby tackled him to the ground and held him down , he made false allegations that i used a weapon , we were both summonsed but i was the only one convicted of assault , the same idiot judge who convicted me , made an off the cuff remark in court a year later about how he would shoot an intruder who tresspassed onto his property , made the national news , hes a notoriously idiotic and intemperate judge

    my point is , no two court sittings are the same ,especially when it comes to relativley minor low profile offenses , you need a good solicitor , i hadnt one and my barrister was a rookie who got stage fright , was a fool not to have appealed what was a stonewall case


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,455 ✭✭✭krd


    I'm not sure a plea of self defence would be appropriate anyway. It the accused intimated the encounter. Curious as to why this wasn't manslaughter though.

    I'm not sure how the process works. Do the Garda suggest the charge, and then the DPP decides. Or the DPP has to make the decision on the basis of the Garda's charge. Or the DPP decides the charge.


    I think the distinction between murder and manslaughter is not just premeditation - but also mens rea. If you start a fight with someone in a pub, and some of your drunken blows kill them, without your intention to kill them, that's manslaughter. If you are sober and you repeatedly kick someone in the head who is on the ground, and they die, that could be taken as you had the deliberate conscious aim of killing them. In that instance it's murder.

    Probably Zhen Dong Zhao's big mistake was saying to the Garda "I wanted to teach him a lesson", instead of saying, "he hit me, and I lost it"....or even better, "he hit me, then threatened to kill me, and I feared for my life, and just lost it"


    Would Zhen Dong Zhao have much chance of an appeal?

    On appeal, can the charge be reduced, from murder to manslaughter - or does it stay the same, unless it's struck out?



    It's an interesting comparison between how Pádraig Nally, was prosecuted for manslaughter for shooting John Ward - and eventually having the conviction quashed.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 611 ✭✭✭Strawberry Fields


    krd wrote: »
    I think the distinction between murder and manslaughter is not just premeditation - but also mens rea. If you start a fight with someone in a pub, and some of your drunken blows kill them, without your intention to kill them, that's manslaughter. If you are sober and you repeatedly kick someone in the head who is on the ground, and they die, that could be taken as you had the deliberate conscious aim of killing them. In that instance it's murder.

    .

    What exactly happened so yesterday with Niall Dory?
    The DPP accepted a guilty plea to manslaughter and didn't prosecute for murder. I can't make it out.http://www.independent.ie/national-news/courts/thug-gets-13-years-in-jail-for-beating-teen-like-a-rag-doll-until-he-died-3333698.html


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 3,455 ✭✭✭krd


    godeas16 wrote: »
    What exactly happened so yesterday with Niall Dory?
    The DPP accepted a guilty plea to manslaughter and didn't prosecute for murder. I can't make it out.http://www.independent.ie/national-news/courts/thug-gets-13-years-in-jail-for-beating-teen-like-a-rag-doll-until-he-died-3333698.html

    While Justice Paul Carney said that alcohol does not afford a defence - which it doesn't, but. The court would consider someone under the influence of alcohol not fully in control of their mental faculties. So, there is a distinction - stamp someone to death while you are drunk, it's manslaughter - do it while you are sober, and it's murder.

    Mens rea, is latin for guilty mind. If someone can say "I was out of me mind on drink, your honour".....Then they did not have a guilty mind. And that is - unless someone can correct me - is the distinction between manslaughter and murder.

    As I was advised by a lunatic acquaintance a few years back, if you absolutely must give someone a savage beating, do it in circumstances where both of you have technically had a drink. Because the presence of alcohol makes it difficult for the courts to decide who is absolutely at fault - the claims of the different parties are unreliable. Most drunken brawls do not result in either a charge or prosecution.

    Violence is as Irish as bacon and cabbage.....alcoholism and child sex abuse.

    Had Zhen Dong Zhao said to the Garda "Well....I had a few scoops for me dinner, and I was nipin' at bottle of Powers - and when that bosie comes in, eyes spin'in on methdone, gives me a box in gob.. and then he falls down, and I tryin' to help him up, but I kept stepin' on his face by accident on account of the drink. ........♫ curmmm out yee black and tans.. curm out and fight me like a man ♫...."..........Then Zhao would have got manslaugther.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 611 ✭✭✭Strawberry Fields


    right grand, didn't know he was drunk. was wondering how they circumvented intention like that. Seems a bit farcical considering the level of violence involved, I would much rather legislation in line with the US - extreme indifference to human life.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,111 ✭✭✭ResearchWill


    krd wrote: »
    While Justice Paul Carney said that alcohol does not afford a defence - which it doesn't, but. The court would consider someone under the influence of alcohol not fully in control of their mental faculties. So, there is a distinction - stamp someone to death while you are drunk, it's manslaughter - do it while you are sober, and it's murder.

    Mens rea, is latin for guilty mind. If someone can say "I was out of me mind on drink, your honour".....Then they did not have a guilty mind. And that is - unless someone can correct me - is the distinction between manslaughter and murder.

    As I was advised by a lunatic acquaintance a few years back, if you absolutely must give someone a savage beating, do it in circumstances where both of you have technically had a drink. Because the presence of alcohol makes it difficult for the courts to decide who is absolutely at fault - the claims of the different parties are unreliable. Most drunken brawls do not result in either a charge or prosecution.

    Violence is as Irish as bacon and cabbage.....alcoholism and child sex abuse.

    Had Zhen Dong Zhao said to the Garda "Well....I had a few scoops for me dinner, and I was nipin' at bottle of Powers - and when that bosie comes in, eyes spin'in on methdone, gives me a box in gob.. and then he falls down, and I tryin' to help him up, but I kept stepin' on his face by accident on account of the drink. ........♫ curmmm out yee black and tans.. curm out and fight me like a man ♫...."..........Then Zhao would have got manslaugther.

    The mens rea for murder is not to have the intention to kill but at a minimum to cause serious harm. In the case quoted the accused while pleading to manslaughter got a sentence closer to murder. While the mandatory sentence for murder is life the usual time served is if I remember is 10 years. The usual for manslaughter is 4 to 6 years a 13 year term is very high.

    You are so wrong in saying most drunken brawls do not result in prosecution, have you visited any district court or circuit court in the country. A huge part of the work load is drunken brawls, being drunk is no defence to beating a person or any crime, try and run the sorry I was pissed defence and see how far you get. The court may take it in to account when deciding on punishment not guilt.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 611 ✭✭✭Strawberry Fields


    reasearch will do you know the above case? What is your take on it?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,111 ✭✭✭ResearchWill


    godeas16 wrote: »
    reasearch will do you know the above case? What is your take on it?

    Nothing more than anyone else who read the article. It seems but is not totally clear that the accused pleaded guilty to manslaughter which was accepted by the DPP (that avoids a trial) as sentence for manslaughter goes 16 years wiþh 3 suspended is high by Irish standards.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20 the_ferreter


    Interesting thread. I read the above case in the papers, was surprised by the sentence he got but then on reading the write up in the paper he would have used what i deem as excessive force, whether he wanted to kill him or not ...he did.

    Ive been on the receiving end of physical violence here in Ireland and both times no charges brought against my assailants. A chunk bitten out of my leg and he walked free....deemed suitable for an adult caution:eek::eek:. And another fella decide to throw a beer barrel at me ,,,which did get me straight across the legs....again no charges brought by the gardai. But when i have a fella throw 5 or 6 punches at me and i do retaliate and put him on his rear end in a couple of punches the Gardai are all over me wanting to press charges.....not excessive but necessary. Now i am an ex kickboxing champion but only used my fists for defence purposes and i wasnt the instigator but i very nearly got charged over it. So it depends n the gardai at the end of the day ....but the law here is so inconsistent its unreal.

    But in the circumstances of someone entering my property and i honestly felt threatened for myself or my family....i got no hesitation using any force to resolve the situation and to hell with the consequences.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,599 ✭✭✭✭CIARAN_BOYLE


    krd wrote: »
    If you have to defend yourself, you have to defend yourself - but you cannot count on being safe from prosecution if you do.
    A Guard once gave the advice the one who is the least injured will usually be judged to have started it in a one on one situation with no witnesses or witnesses who missed the start of the incident.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20 the_ferreter


    A Guard once gave the advice the one who is the least injured will usually be judged to have started it in a one on one situation with no witnesses or witnesses who missed the start of the incident.

    Both my cases were witnessed and on CCTV and still no charges and i was the only one injured!!!!


  • Site Banned Posts: 107 ✭✭big_joe_joyce


    Interesting thread. I read the above case in the papers, was surprised by the sentence he got but then on reading the write up in the paper he would have used what i deem as excessive force, whether he wanted to kill him or not ...he did.

    Ive been on the receiving end of physical violence here in Ireland and both times no charges brought against my assailants. A chunk bitten out of my leg and he walked free....deemed suitable for an adult caution:eek::eek:. And another fella decide to throw a beer barrel at me ,,,which did get me straight across the legs....again no charges brought by the gardai. But when i have a fella throw 5 or 6 punches at me and i do retaliate and put him on his rear end in a couple of punches the Gardai are all over me wanting to press charges.....not excessive but necessary. Now i am an ex kickboxing champion but only used my fists for defence purposes and i wasnt the instigator but i very nearly got charged over it. So it depends n the gardai at the end of the day ....but the law here is so inconsistent its unreal.

    But in the circumstances of someone entering my property and i honestly felt threatened for myself or my family....i got no hesitation using any force to resolve the situation and to hell with the consequences.


    how willing guards are to act often depends on who is complaining and who is being complained about

    some people have so much pull with AGS , they could swing a baseball bat at someone and escape a summons


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20 the_ferreter


    how willing guards are to act often depends on who is complaining and who is being complained about

    some people have so much pull with AGS , they could swing a baseball bat at someone and escape a summons

    Aint that the truth...found that out along the way. No real justice system in Ireland ...way too corrupt and its not what you know its who you know!!!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,088 ✭✭✭OU812


    NIMAN wrote: »
    With the increasing amount of house break-ins these days, I was wondering what the situation would be if you got yourself a baseball bat and had it by your bed, and ended up using it on an intruder?

    Would you get done because you had already armed yourself with a weapon, and almost prepared for dishing out a beating?
    Or would you get off beating a guy with it cos he broke into your home and you could claim self defence?

    I guess it may come down to how badly you beat him.

    I'd say you have a technicality, if you have a bat on it own, you have a weapon, but if you have a bat, glove & ball, you have sports kit .

    I think though if you're going to beat someone with a baseball bat, there's absoluty no need to have both sides of a conversation with the guards


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  • Site Banned Posts: 48 goose_gladwell


    Aint that the truth...found that out along the way. No real justice system in Ireland ...way too corrupt and its not what you know its who you know!!!!

    same guy i refered to in my earlier post who got off for assaulting me on my own property

    drove a northern reg car with no tax for several years , guards never looked at him , he had pull with important politicans and the top brass of AGS


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4 DanMcCann14


    What if a garda is trying to forcibly move you without reasonable cause? I am of course referring to the water meter protests/installations. If you tell the water meter installers you don't want a water meter and a garda comes along to move you, as long as you don't instigate it, can you defend yourself? Specifically, if he/she tries to shove me can I block the shove? Without throwing a punch or retaliating in any way bar preventing the garda from shoving me


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,907 ✭✭✭✭Kristopherus


    What if a garda is trying to forcibly move you without reasonable cause? I am of course referring to the water meter protests/installations. If you tell the water meter installers you don't want a water meter and a garda comes along to move you, as long as you don't instigate it, can you defend yourself? Specifically, if he/she tries to shove me can I block the shove? Without throwing a punch or retaliating in any way bar preventing the garda from shoving me

    This is a 2-year old thread. You might fare better in you start a new one.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,934 ✭✭✭MarkAnthony


    In the situation yo describe the guards have reasonable cause.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4 DanMcCann14


    To provide more context and clarity in this hypothetical scenario, I'm defending my own property and NOT starting a confrontation with the installers or the garda. The shore (I think is what it's called) where they put the meter may not be on the property, but once you remove the cap, you're looking at the infrastructure of your property i.e. the mains and pipes, so it is technically the border of public property (the footpath) and your property. Once that border is crossed, i.e. when an installer puts his hand into the shore, then he/she is technically on your property. When/if said gardaí arrive and you don't start on them but they try to move you from defending your own property and a garda tries to shove you, is that not a just reason to defend yourself? Again when I say "defend yourself" I don't mean throwing a punch or even retaliating, but merely blocking the shove.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,934 ✭✭✭MarkAnthony


    To provide more context and clarity in this hypothetical scenario, I'm defending my own property and NOT starting a confrontation with the installers or the garda. The shore (I think is what it's called) where they put the meter may not be on the property, but once you remove the cap, you're looking at the infrastructure of your property i.e. the mains and pipes, so it is technically the border of public property (the footpath) and your property. Once that border is crossed, i.e. when an installer puts his hand into the shore, then he/she is technically on your property. When/if said gardaí arrive and you don't start on them but they try to move you from defending your own property and a garda tries to shove you, is that not a just reason to defend yourself? Again when I say "defend yourself" I don't mean throwing a punch or even retaliating, but merely blocking the shove.

    You're not 'defending' your property you're attempting to stop a lawful water meter installation.

    The dwelling of every citizen is inviolable and shall not be forcibly entered save in accordance with law.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4 DanMcCann14


    In what way is it lawful? Irish Water have no permission to install a meter on any property, unless the recipient gives it to them. There was never a referendum to achieve such status. They are a semi-state body, not a government organisation. And even if they were, as I said there needs to be a referendum to accomodate such change (the installation of the meters). I realise that for some reason, not engaging them is the same as consent, so just to add, I did deny Irish Water installing a meter on my property, but it couldn't have been further from a confrontation. There was no garda present, I merely said to the guys as nicely as I could "No thanks, we don't want the meter" he replied with "You don't want?" I should clarify by saying they were 2 foreign guys, not that it matters but it provides some context. I then said "No thanks" and he said "Ok no problem" and carried on to the next house. I'm asking the above out of curiosity


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,934 ✭✭✭MarkAnthony


    Thats a huge amount of information to go back to the original point that is the guards would have reasonable cause.

    On a practical level you'd be a fool to try and 'defend' your property. There are many avenues of recourse, standing there obstructing or pushing a guard is not one of them.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,934 ✭✭✭MarkAnthony


    I also don't quite understand why the guards would be involved on your own property anyway - as you've said simply refuse the install. The only way I can see this being an issue is if you're trying to objectrut the install on someone else's property.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,554 ✭✭✭Pat Mustard


    In what way is it lawful? Irish Water have no permission to install a meter on any property, unless the recipient gives it to them. There was never a referendum to achieve such status. They are a semi-state body, not a government organisation. And even if they were, as I said there needs to be a referendum to accomodate such change (the installation of the meters).

    The Water Services Acts appear to give the powers to relevant authorities to install this equipment and to apply for injunctions against people who obstruct them.

    Obstruction of the relevant authorities in the exercise of their powers is a criminal offence.

    But if you want to make an argument about the unconstitutionality of the legislation, you can go to court and argue whatever you like there.

    I don't see that this is a self-defence thread at all, so unless it gets back on track, I'm going to merge it with the Irish Water discussion.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4 DanMcCann14


    Mark Anthony, I don't believe I'd be a fool to defend my property as it's in the rights of every citizen to do so. And again by defend I don't mean going shoving guards or the installers, I mean, as you've agreed with, refusing the install. But there have been many cases on youtube, for example, where people have refused it and gardaí have come and bullied these people out of the way, hence my original point (directed at The Mustard) could you defend yourself if a garda tried to shove you or push you out of the way. And I would not be "obstructing" anyone if I was there from before they arrived, as obstructing is getting in the way (correct me if I'm wrong)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,087 ✭✭✭Pro Hoc Vice


    Mark Anthony, I don't believe I'd be a fool to defend my property as it's in the rights of every citizen to do so. And again by defend I don't mean going shoving guards or the installers, I mean, as you've agreed with, refusing the install. But there have been many cases on youtube, for example, where people have refused it and gardaí have come and bullied these people out of the way, hence my original point (directed at The Mustard) could you defend yourself if a garda tried to shove you or push you out of the way. And I would not be "obstructing" anyone if I was there from before they arrived, as obstructing is getting in the way (correct me if I'm wrong)

    If you are in the way of a person who has a statutory power to do x and you before they arrive stand in the way then you are obstructing. To try and stop a person who has a legal right to do something then it is not self defence.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,934 ✭✭✭MarkAnthony


    Mark Anthony, I don't believe I'd be a fool to defend my property as it's in the rights of every citizen to do so. And again by defend I don't mean going shoving guards or the installers, I mean, as you've agreed with, refusing the install. But there have been many cases on youtube, for example, where people have refused it and gardaí have come and bullied these people out of the way, hence my original point (directed at The Mustard) could you defend yourself if a garda tried to shove you or push you out of the way. And I would not be "obstructing" anyone if I was there from before they arrived, as obstructing is getting in the way (correct me if I'm wrong)

    I'm sorry but given the availability of cheap and excellent cameras one would have to be a complete fool bordering on being a moron.

    Stand back, get it all on tape (god I'm old) and pursue it from there. If you want to see civil disobedience done right watch Gandhi, that's what you need on that scale. Here we've a long and interesting history of people standing up to the State through the courts and winning, that's how you get something done.

    You've had the law explained to you by two very knowledgeable people and one lay person (me). It's simply not self defence.

    I applaud people's sentiment but this is being gone about in completely the wrong way. Water protesters are coming across as thugs, almost universally. There's an easy, simple solution. Don't pay - if no one pays what do you think will happen?

    Anyway /rant you asked for an explanation of the law, you got it. My apologies for derailing the thread.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,333 ✭✭✭Zambia


    Mark Anthony, I don't believe I'd be a fool to defend my property as it's in the rights of every citizen to do so. And again by defend I don't mean going shoving guards or the installers, I mean, as you've agreed with, refusing the install. But there have been many cases on youtube, for example, where people have refused it and gardaí have come and bullied these people out of the way, hence my original point (directed at The Mustard) could you defend yourself if a garda tried to shove you or push you out of the way. And I would not be "obstructing" anyone if I was there from before they arrived, as obstructing is getting in the way (correct me if I'm wrong)

    If you are considering going head to head with the gardai, maybe seek legal advice from someone qualified to defend you later in court.

    Batons hurt instantly
    OC spray burns for 45 minutes
    And assault convictions last a life time.

    If you want free water disconnect from the mains and buy a f--king funnel.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30 Desoh


    Holy crap that must be the most frightening post I have ever read off boards.ie

    I live in Dublin 1 since I bought in 2008 and I have never had an issue with a drug addict apart from being asked for some spare change. You're assuming that every addict will stab you with a a HIV syringe or rob you and that every homeless person will die a horrible violent death? I can assure you it's not the hood. You appear to have experienced every negative experience in life yet you make remarks about liberals who object to some poor soul being kicked to death for 70c? Then at the same time you refer to the Chinese as gooks? Wtf? This ignorant post has made so angry I swear.

    And what does Belsen have to do with it? I hope this is some sort of weird satire that I can't understand.

    RIP Noel you didn't deserve such such treatment and I hope his daughter lives a long, healthy and prosperous life.


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