Coming up with excuses ("no cell service", "I'm not trained", blah, blah, blah etc.), to NOT help a human that you just injured, perhaps mortaly wounded, certainly doesn't paint a pretty picture of your intent or frame of mind.
...to NOT help a human that you just injured, perhaps mortaly wounded,...
We're not arguing semantics, we're arguing common sense. We don't think it's wise to approach within arms' length of someone who just attacked you, placing yourself within easy reach of someone who intended to do you serious bodily harm, and put away your gun so you can render first aid.shurshot said:The OP outlined some very good advice. For the life of me I don't see why so many of you want to ignore it, argue and or debate semantics. I guess that's just how it is on the FL. If you have a Lawyer giving you his perspective based upon Courtroom experience, FOR FREE, why argue?
Coming up with excuses ("no cell service", "I'm not trained", blah, blah, blah etc.), to NOT help a human that you just injured, perhaps mortaly wounded, certainly doesn't paint a pretty picture of your intent or frame of mind.
Well, if they are mortally wounded, you aren't going to be of any help, are you? LOL. You are just going to put yourself in danger.
I will tell you what. Maybe you and Radny97 can come up with some actual statistics to verify his/her claims and actually validate his/her points. Maybe y'all can come up with a number of citable examples where not rendering aid to the bad guy swayed the jury's opinion and resulted in a conviction in a self defense shooting.
Teachable, documented examples are much more helpful than blustery opinion from a person who is only able to cite his/her purported occupation to justify credibility to the claims.
Maybe his family's lawyer then sues you and says that whatever you did to him after you shot him [without justification, of course] contributed to his death from what [the lawyer says] should have been a survivable wound.
As has been mentioned previously, Good Samaritan’s statutes, which almost all states have, provide liability protection for just that scenario. So you can’t be sued if you screw something up when trying to help.
If you really are an attorney, you should know better than that. Good Samaritan laws don't apply in this scenario. In the parable, the Samaritan was a passerby, not one of the robbers that beat the poor victim and left him to die. The laws are typically (always?) written the same way.As has been mentioned previously, Good Samaritan’s statutes, which almost all states have, provide liability protection for just that scenario. So you can’t be sued if you screw something up when trying to help.
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Here's the good Samaritan law for Pennsylvania. In a scenario in which the actor (which is language PA seems to like in its statutes) has just shot the person being treated, I see plenty of exceptions to allow an attorney for the person tthe actor shot (or the shootee's heirs) to get the case into court, or to append it to a case being filed as a negligence suit or some other pretext.Radny97 said:As has been mentioned previously, Good Samaritan’s statutes, which almost all states have, provide liability protection for just that scenario. So you can’t be sued if you screw something up when trying to help.
That might be the worst legal advice I've ever heard.
If you really are an attorney, you should know better than that. Good Samaritan laws don't apply in this scenario. In the parable, the Samaritan was a passerby, not one of the robbers that beat the poor victim and left him to die. The laws are typically (always?) written the same way.
Radny97 said:As has been mentioned previously, Good Samaritan’s statutes, which almost all states have, provide liability protection for just that scenario. So you can’t be sued if you screw something up when trying to help.
No they aren't all written exactly the same. Some are little more than one paragraph, and some meander along for multiple pages. Some have laundry lists of exceptions. One thing most of them seem to have in common, though, is that the relief from liability is premised on the provided first aid being rendered in good faith.Radny97 said:zxcvbob said:If you really are an attorney, you should know better than that. Good Samaritan laws don't apply in this scenario. In the parable, the Samaritan was a passerby, not one of the robbers that beat the poor victim and left him to die. The laws are typically (always?) written the same way.
***sigh***
No, no they’re not. And yes, I am a practicing attorney. I just filed a new lawsuit in Federal court today in fact.
Haha classic logical fallacy = “you must prove the negative”
As has been mentioned previously, Good Samaritan’s statutes, which almost all states have, provide liability protection for just that scenario. So you can’t be sued if you screw something up when trying to help.
I believe you. And I think you're trying to be helpful. But this must not be your field of specialty, because some of your advice is not very good.***sigh***
No, no they’re not. And yes, I am a practicing attorney. I just filed a new lawsuit in Federal court today in fact.
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