Message from @whitedevil
Discord ID: 806145460153745450
first
he would not have been charged
successfully
I'm looking it up
what province
(Something I should have done already..)
Looking it up
🙂
k
Me?
Ontario.
Generally, Canadian law gives residents a wide latitude to legally use violence to defend their home.
no the case, which province
criminal code= violence is entirely legal if someone has “reasonable grounds” to believe that the “threat of force is being made against them or another person.”
If you’re defending yourself against a violent attack and there is no other way to escape death or serious injury, then you can use an unlimited amount of violence to stop it
but it depends on each circumstance
also.....
Yes, but the courts like to fuck over gun owners,
just as much as the liberal party.
Canada even has a de facto “stand your ground” law. Nobody in Canada has an obligation to retreat when their home is involved. If an intruder comes through the front door with an axe, no judge will ever question why a homeowner didn’t simply escape out the back door.
Gilbert Budgell, the 53-year-old man whose home they were allegedly invading, is now in police custody facing the unusually severe charge of second-degree murder.
it doesnt mention if the yhad weapons, does it?
OH
i know why
it does not mention it
They were unarmed and FLEEING the property when he shot them
I'm not sure.
thats DIff!
Thank you I had seen stuff like that online and I didn’t know if that was real or not I figured I would ask you guys considering you would be the ones to know
Guerin was charged with criminal negligence, but less than a year later, a jury let the shopkeeper walk free.
He walked away
so...
Glock 17 is banned for Canadians because the barrel being too short. Canada's shooting market is tiny compared to the U.S., but it's one of Glock's most-consistent countries for sales with 4,000 to 5,000 guns sold each year on average.
even that was allwoed
it is dumb
did you see the conclusion tho?
Most Canadian gun laws are.
Guerin was charged with criminal negligence, but less than a year later, a jury let the shopkeeper walk free.
what shop keeper?
teh guy
