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Video Review Of Clerk Attacked With Bat: Self Defence, Or Gone Too Far?

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  • Опубліковано 11 кві 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 496

  • @eliseoleahy4229
    @eliseoleahy4229 Місяць тому +165

    🤔 If you don’t want smacked with your own bat, don’t jack up someone’s adrenaline/fight or flight response and expect them to be chill the second the situation might be over. The clerk’s response afterward is telling.
    My two pence.

    • @darkfirezero
      @darkfirezero Місяць тому +1

      Totally agree on every point.

  • @Andrew-ky8oc8cq4n
    @Andrew-ky8oc8cq4n Місяць тому +151

    Expecting an untrained civilian who just survived a violent life or death attack with injuries to properly de-escalate and keep in mind and follow the letter of the law.... Jury nullification!

  • @sarnxero2628
    @sarnxero2628 Місяць тому +182

    If i was on that jury i would never vote to convict that clerk

    • @MarcumDavid
      @MarcumDavid Місяць тому

      I'm not a fan of jury nullification. I think it degrades our society.

    • @adampeters9861
      @adampeters9861 Місяць тому +63

      @@MarcumDavid Prosecutors who go harder on victims than they do criminals degrade it far more.

    • @frankbaird5844
      @frankbaird5844 Місяць тому +14

      he needs a jury trial for sure, no reasonable canadian will convict this guy for taking out the trash

    • @wilfdarr
      @wilfdarr Місяць тому +14

      Came to say the same. This isn't a case of vigilantism where he found the guy at home, and he's not a trained police officer: if he was a trained police officer, if he initiated the contact, then you expect him to be thinking clearly, but he was doing his job and was attacked, you can't expect someone to react rationally in the moments after an attack like that.

    • @vandalsgarage
      @vandalsgarage Місяць тому +3

      @@wilfdarr It's unlikely it will go to trial. The whole system is rigged for plea deals. Most people cannot afford to hire a good attorney who will prepare a defense for a jury trial. Prosecutors will load up the charges, and you'll plea guilty to a lesser offense.
      In this case, I'd bet dollars to donuts they'll charge him with aggravated assault, and as long as the robber wasn't permanently injured, the clerk will accept a plea for misdemeanor assault. Want to go to trial, you're looking at 100K minimum, if you need investigators and expert witnesses along with your team of attorneys, legal assistants, etc. Just hiring an attorney who will negotiate a plea for you will cost about 10K on a serious offense like this. That is from recent experience, btw, not speculation.

  • @midik123
    @midik123 Місяць тому +117

    It was not clerks decisions to rob and bring a bat ...

    • @ch34pskate16
      @ch34pskate16 Місяць тому +7

      This is the problem in Canadian justice!

    • @eastlynburkholder3559
      @eastlynburkholder3559 Місяць тому +4

      In many jurisdictions, the person bringing a gun or other weapon to the scene would never get to press charbges and the state or local jurisdiction would not press charges.

    • @johns1625
      @johns1625 Місяць тому

      It was the clerks decision to use lethal force in an unlawful manner.

    • @adampeters9861
      @adampeters9861 Місяць тому +17

      @@johns1625 How clear do you expect someone's decision making process to be after they've been suddenly hit with a bat?

    • @seanrutledge2953
      @seanrutledge2953 Місяць тому +9

      @@johns1625 between the time that he got the bat from the robber and the time that he took his second swing only five seconds elapsed. In my first watch-through at full speed I thought it was 2-seconds . . . and I wasn't struggling for my life with a violent offender. It looks less like a 'decision' and more like reflex to me. And then, when he realizes the robber is out of the fight, he walks away and calls (presumably) the police. No intent, no crime.

  • @buhmand
    @buhmand Місяць тому +66

    The second hit can be defended by using studies about reaction time on the road. The average reaction time is between 1 and 2 seconds, the first heat was at 03 seconds, and the second one was at 04. He couldn't be sure the first hit would be so efficient and the second one was already planned in his head for self-defence. Once he was able to realize the threat was neutralized, he stopped and walked away.

    • @SimonTyler_humanfly
      @SimonTyler_humanfly Місяць тому +25

      Strongly agree. Even trained professionals have difficulty with this. There should be an allowance in the law for the human nature of someone who has just been assaulted himself with a deadly weapon. “[it] is of fundamental importance that justice should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done” Drop all charges, lest the system of justice become a system of injustice. Proceeding with prosecution would create a wider disrespect for the law.

    • @soulcstudios
      @soulcstudios Місяць тому +15

      I went frame by frame and it does look to be barely under 3 seconds from the bat first making contact to the second contact. The guy still had to fall during that time frame. I'm glad to know there is science to point to about how unreasonable it is to expect the clerk to have taken a different action.

    • @darkfirezero
      @darkfirezero Місяць тому +5

      ​@@soulcstudiosI'm not trained in any weapons so if I had to hit someone I wouldn't assume I'd achieved my goal after the first swing.

    • @soulcstudios
      @soulcstudios Місяць тому +2

      @@darkfirezero Another great point!

  • @MartyWoodcock
    @MartyWoodcock Місяць тому +68

    The robber came armed and ready for confrontation. If it wasnt for the other person, the clerk could have been the one on the ground.

    • @eastlynburkholder3559
      @eastlynburkholder3559 Місяць тому +1

      The would be robber should hsve been made to call the police himself. Or to speak to police after some one called police.

  • @robinbliss6513
    @robinbliss6513 Місяць тому +51

    Can he have a jury trial? No jury would convict him. Period.

    • @Tinmann_77
      @Tinmann_77 Місяць тому +15

      A Democrat jury would. So would a jury in Quebec

    • @MarcumDavid
      @MarcumDavid Місяць тому +5

      I think you're wrong. If I was on the jury, I would give him a fair listen. But from that video it doesn't look like self-defense to me. I'm not a fan of jury nullification.

    • @Matt-xc6sp
      @Matt-xc6sp Місяць тому +9

      It’s a form of brainrot that makes you turn every internet comment into a chance to bash the “other side”. Also this is in Canada.

    • @mballer
      @mballer Місяць тому +7

      ​@@MarcumDavid
      What would you listen to, he has the right to remain silent.
      The bad guy jacked up the other guy with adrenaline against his will.

    • @Refertech101
      @Refertech101 Місяць тому +7

      @@MarcumDavid you are the problem.

  • @katrinkarlsdottir
    @katrinkarlsdottir Місяць тому +27

    I feel that the clerk was acting in self defense and was effctively drugged with adrenaline.

    • @embee7434
      @embee7434 Місяць тому +2

      Which he would not have been, but for the actions of the aggressor.
      So unfortunate all around. Poor clerk.

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson Місяць тому +21

    I worked as a police officer for over 24 years, the harddest thing I ever did was to call on a very good friend and inform him that his son who was 18 had been killed while working as a convience store clerk. I brought along our preacher to help the family with the news, it is something I will never forget. He is still a friend but every time I see him I think of that nigh some 45 years ago.

    • @susandavidson1691
      @susandavidson1691 Місяць тому +3

      ❤. I’m sure he appreciates it was you and also appreciated you kind thoughts on bringing a priest with you.
      As a nurse it’s terrible too inform families of a death, let alone someone you know.

  • @locoseven
    @locoseven Місяць тому +53

    Our entire legal system needs to be revamped, it seems criminals have more rights than citizens.

  • @eddiebruv
    @eddiebruv Місяць тому +33

    An old work mate caught someone in the act of robbing his apartment. He basically ended up ejecting from the fore escape and he ended up in hospital. My mate told the police how he put the guy over and the copper says ‘you mean he slipped and fell’? Matey says ‘no, I put him over’. The copper repeats ‘you mean he slipped and fell’? The penny finally dropped and he agreed that the burglar slipped and fell while running away.
    He’d have been in trouble if the copper hadn’t tipped him the wink. This was years ago. Most police would probably be on the side of the actual villain now.

    • @bencheevers6693
      @bencheevers6693 Місяць тому +3

      No sarcasm at all, that's good police right there
      (Also a wire reference)

    • @ThatRedhedd
      @ThatRedhedd Місяць тому

      Great cop! Where are you from? I like the vernacular!

    • @bencheevers6693
      @bencheevers6693 Місяць тому +1

      @@ThatRedhedd Prolly UK, look at the username

    • @eddiebruv
      @eddiebruv Місяць тому

      *fire

    • @darkfirezero
      @darkfirezero Місяць тому

      Shiiiiiiiiiit. ​@@bencheevers6693

  • @robinrh117
    @robinrh117 Місяць тому +17

    Wow…. This is heartbreaking. The clerk didn’t ask for this. He’s trying to get an education, working a job, minding his own business. You mentioned adrenaline - I can see that second strike as a product of wanting to make sure he doesn’t get away while authorities come? This just tragic. I hope the Crown shows leniency. Please keep us updated.

  • @chrisfaller2675
    @chrisfaller2675 Місяць тому +64

    To quote John Correia over at active self protection "the criminal put the coin in the jukebox he gets to dance to the tune"

  • @dattebenforcer
    @dattebenforcer Місяць тому +37

    "second hit when he's on the ground" yeah, so he doesn't get back up and keep assaulting you, possibly getting the best of you. Are you supposed to give your assailant a fair chance?
    I hate when determinations are made by people who have never been in a fight/dangerous situation and understand nothing of reality.

    • @Refertech101
      @Refertech101 Місяць тому +4

      that is pretty well the entire government and a good chunk of the police system, we live in a pampered coddled society.

    • @vandalsgarage
      @vandalsgarage Місяць тому +4

      The last bar fight I was in, I had to go to the ER to get my mouth stitched up, because the guy (about my size) sucker-punched me, putting one of my teeth through my lower lip. Yes, a fight ensued, and he was charged and I was not. But the punch to my jaw would not have given me an excuse to pull out a pistol (which I sometimes carry).
      People have wildly exaggerated views on what they can do in "self-defense" which is only the amount of force required to reasonably protect yourself. If the aggressor is someone like Mike Tyson, the amount of force used in self defense is greater than if the aggressor is a 100 lb young woman. In the case of this video, the clerk had to wrestle the bat away from a third party in order to use it on the fleeing robber. Tough to argue that he was in any danger at that point. I see two crimes.

    • @transsnack
      @transsnack Місяць тому

      Honestly, if this were a jury trial, I wouldn't convict him at all. He got hit with a mf bat. That sh*t hurts, and that's a scary situation. I might not have stopped at 2, especially if there was a chance of him getting back up to try again.

  • @Timberland1963
    @Timberland1963 Місяць тому +61

    He should never have been charged. It’s ridiculous that someone can’t deal with a threat against their life without having to worry about getting arrested. The guy came into his place of business hit him with a bat and tried to rob him. He should be allowed to neutralize the threat.

    • @jackielinde7568
      @jackielinde7568 Місяць тому +4

      I don't like it, either. I don't know what the law is like in Onterio, but the DA's hands might be tied. But depending on how the law's written, this might be a crime. And, some will argue that it's not like a moving violation or parking ticket, where you can expect a "no harm, no foul" argument for digression. Someone went down and that someone went to the hospital.
      I don't like arguing Jury Nullification, but if this does go to trial, I hope it happens in this case.

    • @johnnemeth6913
      @johnnemeth6913 Місяць тому +2

      ​@@jackielinde7568US and Canadian criminal law are quite different. In Canada, criminal law is strictly federal. The prosecutors are called, "Crown Counsel", as they represent the Crown. Also, prosecutors are hired, not elected. They do have the ability to not bring charges if it isn't in the public interest.
      I would argue in this case that it isn't. As others have have said, it is very likely that I wouldn't convict if I was on the jury.

    • @johns1625
      @johns1625 Місяць тому +4

      He was disarmed. Attacker was retreating. The threat was over. I swear to god the most ignorant people on self defense are the ones commenting on these videos.

    • @Timberland1963
      @Timberland1963 Місяць тому +12

      @@johns1625 You’re probably one those people that says you can’t shoot an armed person that breaks into your house.

    • @adampeters9861
      @adampeters9861 Місяць тому +5

      @@johns1625 Regardless, the prosecutor has the power of discretion, meaning he still *doesn't have to charge this guy* despite all of those facts.

  • @blacksmithden
    @blacksmithden Місяць тому +15

    We the jury find the defendant guilty of deserving a medal. I'm sure the judge would over rule me, berate me, and probably replace me, but I'd NEVER agree to a guilty verdict. Is the clerk guilty of assault ? By our bent laws, yes. Of course he is. Would I agree to punishing him for it ? Nope. not a hope in hell. If that means ignoring the letter of the law in this circumstance....oh well.

  • @user-ji7mu5sj6b
    @user-ji7mu5sj6b Місяць тому +41

    Charged and convicted are two different things. I would assume the clerk’s lawyers will argue that he was distraught and fearing for his life. The adrenaline and anger got the better of him.

    • @pepebeezon772
      @pepebeezon772 Місяць тому +13

      They're different, but he should neither be charged or convicted

    • @elaexplorer
      @elaexplorer Місяць тому +11

      Did you miss the part where he is having trouble raising money for a lawyer?

    • @Refertech101
      @Refertech101 Місяць тому +9

      the issue he was even charged to begin with when you have such crystal clear evidence is the real problem.

  • @megkiely0128
    @megkiely0128 Місяць тому +22

    Please keep us posted… that’s terrible that the clerk is now in trouble

  • @reclaimedclassicdesigns
    @reclaimedclassicdesigns Місяць тому +24

    If the store clerk hadn't had help he would most likely be the one laying knocked out on the floor. Although the robber was running away I do think this is a case where the crown should use discretion with the store clerk.

  • @wyzasukitan
    @wyzasukitan Місяць тому +17

    I feel terrible for this man. The time and expense required to defend a man just trying to protect himself, the other customer(s) and his job is such a waste, not to mention an injustice.
    Canada’s ‘legal’ situation would be comedy, if it weren’t tragedy foremost. When will we stop protecting the *real* criminals from the consequences of their actions???

  • @danr7025
    @danr7025 Місяць тому +28

    I wonder if the Toronto cop who got stabbed in the leg today is going to get charged for shooting his attacker? Both are in hospital tonight. Another story to follow!

  • @MarvinCZ
    @MarvinCZ Місяць тому +16

    I feel similarly. This is a typical "one (or two) hits too many" situation which the law probably wouldn't accept here as self-defense either, but I feel bad for him. When I talked about this with people, they often don't realize at what point they should stop, even when rationally debating. A man in that situation definitely isn't just thinking rationally.

    • @DylanYoung
      @DylanYoung Місяць тому +10

      This. The law seems to have zero understanding of cognitive responses to the stress of a deadly situation.

  • @summer6100
    @summer6100 Місяць тому +8

    The things that sway my opinion are 1. his reaction afterwards. hands on head, doubled over, squatting down, I recognize this behavior as what i do when I am panicking. Also immediately calling police (assuming that's what he's doing with his phone) shows that getting help is a bigger priority to him than avoiding consequence. I think this is someone who is scared and operating in a mentality of self defense. 2 the original bat wielders mask and hood. I think obscuring his face and bringing a bat is enough to justify an assumption that he is a threat, even without considering whatever happened at the beginning of the altercation. 3. I would not expect a person flooded with adrenaline to recognize when a threat has given up as quickly as he would have needed to here. Hormones hinder our more complex thoughts and impact the way we interpret our observations.
    I'm sad this led to serious injury, but also I cant expect anything else from someone in this circumstance.

  • @selkiemaine
    @selkiemaine Місяць тому +10

    The problem I have with this situation is that it all happens so fast that the clerk was quite likely running purely on instinct - he'd just been hit - there was history of other problems at the location. It was no more than 2 or 3 seconds of anger. I just don't think that adrenaline and fight-or-flight shuts off that fast. Against the law? As you said, I think he met the definition of having committed the crime. But, I do think it's a crime that should not have been charged.

  • @sbarmiueenl
    @sbarmiueenl Місяць тому +55

    Had he not called the police, no one would have complained about anything.

    • @ColinFinkle
      @ColinFinkle Місяць тому +3

      Good point!

    • @oaksnice
      @oaksnice Місяць тому +3

      I can't tell if you're joking but obviously the clerk would have been found by the police and he would still face charges. Maybe even worse charges if he didn't call for help after knocking the guy out.

    • @oaksnice
      @oaksnice Місяць тому +3

      ​@@acmhfmggru He's unconscious in the street. Of course someone would notify the police or paramedics (who would also notify the police)

    • @PSUQDPICHQIEIWC
      @PSUQDPICHQIEIWC Місяць тому

      @@acmhfmggru If the criminal believes that the state will act in his favor, then of course they'll report it. Do you think they'll necessarily be truthful? It wouldn't be the first time a crook has called the cops on their victim. It's also not something that never works out in the favor of the crook.

    • @PSUQDPICHQIEIWC
      @PSUQDPICHQIEIWC Місяць тому +1

      @@acmhfmggru What part of the things I described sounds like a hollywood film? I have to ask you, since apparently you spend much more time engrossed in those sorts of fiction, sweet cheeks.

  • @gingy2746
    @gingy2746 Місяць тому +10

    That poor clerk 😢

  • @Momshouseofchaos
    @Momshouseofchaos Місяць тому +10

    I guess I look at it as to whether I think the foreign student/clerk is likely to be a danger to the public. It would seem that the answer is "no" and that he's only a danger to criminals trying to rob him or his workplace while he's working. I hope he gets a very good defense attorney and that the prosecutor sees it similarly to me...

  • @alexscottthompson812
    @alexscottthompson812 Місяць тому +17

    If that was a random attack and not a self-defense scenario, the clerk would have gotten less time. Criminals go free, normal people are punished

  • @vampgaia
    @vampgaia Місяць тому +9

    I don't believe the clerk would have been charged with anything if he were in the United States. I certainly would not charge him.

    • @kchickw2557
      @kchickw2557 Місяць тому +3

      I disagree. We have had some cases where citizen hero’s have been charged. It is all a mess

    • @adampeters9861
      @adampeters9861 Місяць тому +2

      It really varies from one state to another and sometimes even from county to county. Generally speaking, red jurisdictions are a lot more understanding when it comes to armed victims than blue ones are.

    • @vampgaia
      @vampgaia Місяць тому

      I'm in the Deep South. I should not have been so generalized in my comment. @@adampeters9861

    • @vampgaia
      @vampgaia Місяць тому

      I'm in the Deep South. My comment was too generalized. I agree we are a hot mess. @@kchickw2557

  • @Slicksnoopy
    @Slicksnoopy Місяць тому +53

    Thats a slippery slope to start charging people defending themselves against criminals. Whose to say he didnt have a second weapon and was gaining distance to pull it out.

    • @kstricl
      @kstricl Місяць тому +9

      This! I hope the clerk gets a lawyer that considers this. I mean the clerk did stop once he came down a bit from the adrenaline and realized the guy wasn't going to fight back further.

    • @johnsmith34
      @johnsmith34 Місяць тому +5

      Hence why it is the second hit while he was on the ground that is an issue.

    • @MarcumDavid
      @MarcumDavid Місяць тому +5

      It's a slippery slope not pursuing legal justice, because you favor one party over another. That sword is a double edged one.

    • @coolliz21
      @coolliz21 Місяць тому +1

      @@acmhfmggruI agree. It’s a system that disincentivizes reporting crimes and injuries, which could result in even worse outcomes overall.

  • @InfestedTemplar
    @InfestedTemplar Місяць тому +15

    My impression from the earlier story on this event was that the robber was disarmed INSIDE the store, then chased outside and hit with his bat. If that was what happened I could see an argument for charging the clerk as he would have known the robber was fleeing, even if I personally would disagree.
    To convict on what we see here you would have to determine that the fight was over the exact second the robber lost control of the weapon and that the clerk knew this. Refusing to allow an assault victim even 5 seconds to recognise that the assault is over is clearly unreasonable.

  • @ottosdad
    @ottosdad Місяць тому +39

    There needs to be a FAFO ammendment to the criminal code.

  • @craigmhall
    @craigmhall Місяць тому +32

    Cops wouldn't have been half as gentle taking him down for resisting arrest. I get the law, but this does not seem like justice.

    • @rickmossop3733
      @rickmossop3733 Місяць тому +6

      "Stop resisting!" As the guy is knocked out on the ground.

  • @candtdesignsandarms9617
    @candtdesignsandarms9617 Місяць тому +48

    this is why I hate "legal" systems. The assumption should be that if attacked like that, even with the attacker retreating, the attacker could come back and continue the assault. A temporary retreat

    • @dattebenforcer
      @dattebenforcer Місяць тому +11

      Or bring reinforcements, or get the drop on you. Why are you giving them the initiative? People are stupid.

    • @soulcstudios
      @soulcstudios Місяць тому +4

      Yes, this was running on a loop in my mind throughout the video.
      The first hit, even with him retreating (and still on property!) shouldn't be questionable.
      That second hit when he's on the ground, the clerk could go back into the store to lock up and call the police? Well, logically that should be a no. But adrenaline isn't logical.

  • @Epic-so3ek
    @Epic-so3ek Місяць тому +42

    Why did they have to charge this guy? This is ridiculous. How do these prosecutors sleep at night?

    • @JayeEllis
      @JayeEllis Місяць тому +4

      Because he lost the element of imminence. They guy was running away, so no self defense. Are YOU asleep?

    • @AliceBowie
      @AliceBowie Місяць тому +12

      The guy could have been running to get distance so he could turn around and start shooting.

    • @DrakonPhD
      @DrakonPhD Місяць тому +3

      ​@@AliceBowieIf he had a gun he wouldn't have brought a bat.

    • @JayeEllis
      @JayeEllis Місяць тому +2

      @@AliceBowie You've already disarmed him of his primary weapon, and you just assume he also has a gun? Now you're beyond the element of reasonableness.

    • @TheDarwinProject1
      @TheDarwinProject1 Місяць тому +4

      Criminals are often dumb. Maybe he idolized someone who uses a bat to fight or gets off by dreaming of beating someone to death, but his girl made him bring the gun "for safety"? 🤔

  • @soulcstudios
    @soulcstudios Місяць тому +4

    I have an adrenaline disorder that's incredibly debilitating. My (palpitating) heart goes out to the clerk. I know for most people adrenaline rushes don't involve fainting and muscle tremors so intense they're mistaken for seizures, but fucking hell.
    Punishing a person for doing to an aggressor what the aggressor was trying to do to them? The moment someone is down, with no referee, you're supposed to stop that instant? It's 2 seconds. 2:18 to 2:20.
    They guy only starts retreating after they have the bat. Before then, it's taking two people to push this guy out the door.
    And you can still fight from the ground. Not well, and it's not likely when the person is already trying to run. But the other guy is full of adrenaline too, he's not thinking straight either, who knows what the hell he's going to do.
    It's 2 seconds and the clerk has to realize the guy's on the ground, he has to realize that he needs to stop and take a moment to re access. He can't, in 2 seconds, tell if the guy is going to be getting up or lashing out from the ground in 2 seconds. In those 2 seconds, the guy is still falling.
    Please, don't let those 2 seconds ruin the clerks life.

  • @curteaton
    @curteaton Місяць тому +8

    My comments don't always get deleted on UA-cam, but when they do, they were 100% true .

    • @tarzanstrickland
      @tarzanstrickland Місяць тому

      so true

    • @phylbiggs123
      @phylbiggs123 Місяць тому +1

      WTf ?? Mine too. Long dissertation about how the guy should have gotten additional charges for infliction of emotional distress for the clerks charges.. and its nowhere to be found..

  • @jobowman369
    @jobowman369 Місяць тому +24

    If they can get up, they are still a danger to you. I don’t even know how this is the law. The clerk was attacked and defended himself.

    • @Brittanysplittany
      @Brittanysplittany Місяць тому +1

      I agree, but I think the problem is the robber was running away.

    • @darkfirezero
      @darkfirezero Місяць тому +1

      The clerk probably decided to incapacitate him​@@Brittanysplittany and that's as far as his jacked up brain could get until it was 'too late' to change the script.

  • @kennyheimbuch8686
    @kennyheimbuch8686 Місяць тому +10

    In any event the fact that the robber got only 14 months tells us everything we need to know about how rotten the Canadian system is.

  • @XX_RIDER
    @XX_RIDER Місяць тому +4

    Our laws are broken especially in regards to self defense.
    I don't want to see people being beat to death for attempting to rob a store but if you attack someone with a bat that person has to assume that you are armed. When he turned he could have easily pulled a gun or knife. He had a bat God only knows what else he could have.
    The clerk stopped as soon as he was no longer a threat you can't turn off adrenaline that easily.
    If it was a police officer in place of the clerk he would never have been charged.

  • @ScottBaker_
    @ScottBaker_ Місяць тому +15

    All I can think of is the movie Zombieland. Rule #2 Double Tap.

  • @user-he6tq3dh4y
    @user-he6tq3dh4y Місяць тому +10

    Ian, do the courts not make any allowance for actions that one might take under the stress of having just been assaulted and forced into a potentially life and death confrontation? I think it's only human to want to stop the criminal from escaping and as with police, parsing the exact amount of allowable force is unreasonable in the moment.

  • @harleyt1123
    @harleyt1123 Місяць тому +4

    Self defense, the culprit could get up.

    • @JayeEllis
      @JayeEllis Місяць тому

      Could he? I'm not so sure. He looks incapacitated to me.

    • @delta3244
      @delta3244 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@JayeEllis "[You are] not so sure," and you're sitting at home with time to think rationally about the situation seen from a bird's-eye view. No chance the clerk could know his assailent was incapacitated before he _began the motion_ of his second swing (it's kinda hard to stop swinging a bat after you start!)

    • @JayeEllis
      @JayeEllis Місяць тому +1

      @@delta3244 So? That doesn't change the law. Guy was disarmed and fleeing. No imminent threat.

    • @delta3244
      @delta3244 Місяць тому +1

      @@JayeEllis "That doesn't change the law" indeed, but it might demonstrate that the law's flawed.

    • @JayeEllis
      @JayeEllis Місяць тому +1

      @@delta3244 It might, you never know. Won't help this guy, though. The law at the time is the law applied.

  • @Conicee
    @Conicee Місяць тому +7

    Yeah... on one hand I can see why a processor would charge the guy becuase by the second swing he was clearly incapacitated. On the other hand I probably would do the exact same thing in his position (not on purpose) with all of the adrenaline. I feel the theif should definitely be getting more of a serious charge than the clerk. I dont think he needs to be deported for defending himself. Its just a bad situation and I hope the judge/jury can see that and be kind to the guy.

  • @vince8723
    @vince8723 Місяць тому +3

    that button was pushed he was just in that mode. can't blame him for that. that person could have turned around at any time and attacked again. it's like poking a bear in the woods. then all of a sudden it's the bear's fault

  • @Elleffe
    @Elleffe Місяць тому

    It’s appalling the poor clerk was even charged and is risking getting deported.

  • @cheyennespring3455
    @cheyennespring3455 Місяць тому +7

    How would 'in the heat of the moment' impact the charges? I can see that the clerk would have been in the heat of the moment situation.

  • @NathanFree84
    @NathanFree84 Місяць тому +3

    The circumstances alone tell you this is in Canada. Only in the tyrannical country formally known as Canada can the store clerk be the criminal in this situation.
    Clerks in the United States can literally (and recently have) shoot robbers in the back who are running away. I hate my country now.... Sad.

    • @Refertech101
      @Refertech101 Місяць тому

      Painful when you see reality for the first time, but don't worry, it gets much worse, right now the government is trying to remove the right of personal property, they are using scary guns atm to hide the true intent of their law.

    • @boobah5643
      @boobah5643 Місяць тому

      I know some people argue that New York City isn't really the US any longer, but just a year or so back there was a case that came up where a bodega clerk defended himself from a knifeman that was only quashed because of the attention it got in the media.

  • @Always_Thinking
    @Always_Thinking Місяць тому +3

    I wonder if the store had been robbed before? It's hard to tell if the 1st hit was enough to stop him from getting away or if the clerk believed he was able or started to get up & attack him🤔🤔

  • @drew79s
    @drew79s Місяць тому +3

    I think there's a really easy way to address this, the same standard should be applied to police and everyone else in these circumstances. Police are argued to be operating in their own defence only and have no obligation to protect others, therefore there is a perfect analogue here, honestly... I think that, if it's unacceptable for a civilian or, frankly anyone to have a different right to bodily integrity or autonomy to anyone else with the exception of people who have been convicted of a crime by a court and are undertaking judicial punishment at that time.

  • @Helblind
    @Helblind Місяць тому +3

    My only issue is that he stopped at two swings. Jokes aside, I hope there is a defense lawyer like you in Ontario willing to help this clerk out.

  • @martyflannigan5052
    @martyflannigan5052 Місяць тому +3

    I agree with you, the clerk should be given some kind of leniency. He was defending himself it looked like he was favoring his head like he got hit first. I think really depends how good his lawyer is.

  • @g.c.3339
    @g.c.3339 Місяць тому +7

    Stores should leave the money in a bag at the door - so the robbers will leave the employees alone (at least according to TO Police).

  • @MrRorschach87
    @MrRorschach87 Місяць тому +3

    Not a lawyer here, obviously. And I'm from Eastern Europe, so our laws are somewhat different anyways. But seeing a video of (I believe) US police officers emptying few mags into a woman in her own house, just to be proven the woman broke into her own house because she lost a key? To me it just proves that even trained professionals whose job is to keep cool under pressure can make terrible decisions under pressure, let alone regular person not expecting life threatening attack.
    I feel very strongly that guy should not be prosecuted, but I know law is not about feeling. I just hope he can get his life together after this whole ordeal.

    • @feuilletoniste
      @feuilletoniste Місяць тому

      You’re absolutely right! So many tragedies have occurred because fully trained, heavily armed police have panicked and made a bad judgement call. (I was just reading about a case where a teenage girl was shot and killed by the police who were supposed to be rescuing her from a parental kidnapping, even though one of the officers recognized her and told his colleagues to stop shooting.) The police rarely face meaningful consequences in these situations, and they absolutely ought to know better. It’s absurd to hold an ordinary citizen who has just been attacked to a higher standard than the police!

  • @MaltaMcMurchy
    @MaltaMcMurchy Місяць тому +9

    As far as I see it, he disabled an imminent threat.

  • @Rx7man
    @Rx7man Місяць тому +7

    I see how it's legally problematic, but the charges being dropped would suit me just fine... Was the attacker really retreating or was he just trying to get space to come at them again? I mean it's a couple seconds of difference, and in the heat of the moment your mind is in fight mode.. No audio means we also don't know if the guy was threatening verbally or pleading "I give up"

  • @GrainJB
    @GrainJB Місяць тому +11

    Should not have been charged to begin with.

  • @joels7605
    @joels7605 Місяць тому +2

    I love watching this Canadian Law Mage.

  • @fourlegsgoodtwolegsbad
    @fourlegsgoodtwolegsbad Місяць тому +2

    The coup de grace is problematic for sure. I would simply hope for the MOST leniency for victims of violent crimes who cross the line. This is not how the system works though...

  • @amadeuss3341
    @amadeuss3341 Місяць тому

    Jury will never convict him.
    Under mortal danger, people don't think straight.

  • @starrywizdom
    @starrywizdom Місяць тому

    That poor clerk. What a hell of a situation he was put in. It's not surprising that he freaked out & whacked the bat-bringer a couple times before he stopped himself. It feels very icky to prosecute this clerk to the full extent of the law...

  • @johnwalker1471
    @johnwalker1471 Місяць тому +45

    I think the prosecutor should be forced to get on his knees and beg forgiveness for wasting the courts time.

  • @chrisblack6258
    @chrisblack6258 Місяць тому +3

    I'm just glad I did not study in Canada

  • @ChristopherKlepel
    @ChristopherKlepel Місяць тому +3

    Why does it feel like in Canada, criminals Get the better end of things. most of the time the police just let them get away with stuff. Stealing vehicles, etc. When they do get caught, there's very little fines and the honest people, whether it be with guns or self defense or whatever, are the ones who end up with Being charged.

    • @Refertech101
      @Refertech101 Місяць тому

      because our country is a tyrannical joke with an overtly kowtowed society happy to be F'd raw by uncle daddy guberment? they happily signed away their rights and freedoms for convenience and the illusion of sfaety

  • @aesavwesaka4215
    @aesavwesaka4215 Місяць тому +11

    There's nothing to reform or rehabilitate. The clerk was only put into the situation because they were a victim. Punishing them only serves to send a message to the public that they cannot attack someone once the confrontation ends.. Does that really help when many people aren't going to be in a logical frame of mind during these types of scenarios. I don't think society really benefits from punishing the clerk in any meaningful way.

    • @theghostofsw6276
      @theghostofsw6276 Місяць тому +8

      It also send the message what a DANGER all these cameras in society really are.....the camera did absolutely nothing with regards to identifying the robber, but did everything to sink the store clerk. The old ways were a lot better.

    • @t-and-p
      @t-and-p Місяць тому +5

      This! I agree, and I also think that this is where Runkle made an excellent point, too, that the Crown should have looked at this and decided that pursuing it was not in the public interest.

  • @WingedAsarath
    @WingedAsarath Місяць тому +2

    I completely understand the need for some limitations on self-defence; it would be unreasonable for someone to, say, choke someone to death in retaliation for being punched. This case is tricky as both swings are not clear-cut - for the first the robber is running away so is not currently a threat, amd by the second he's on the ground and even less of a potential threat. In the heat of the moment I can see how it happened, and I definitely hope they're lenient on the clerk in this instance, but I understand where the law is coming from because there does need to be some line in the sand as to what is acceptable and what isn't. Stopping when the attacker is no longer an immediate threat is a reasonable place to draw such a line, but of course there will always be these fuzzy cases where it's on the line.

    • @delta3244
      @delta3244 Місяць тому

      The line has to be far enough past the point where the threat is neutralized (in cases where neutralizing it is justified) for human brains to have enough time to process it, else the law criminalizes measured responses.

  • @dogfostermom2018
    @dogfostermom2018 Місяць тому +1

    Punishing the victim is just wrong. Criminals are being let go in droves while innocent people suffer. Just not right.

    • @argentinelawdness
      @argentinelawdness Місяць тому

      In point of fact, if he's punished for this, he'll be one of those Criminals you're talking about. A foreign criminal.

  • @007nadineL
    @007nadineL Місяць тому +2

    Police make it sound like there are more facts that will come out in court to explain all this better
    .

  • @frankbaird5844
    @frankbaird5844 Місяць тому +1

    the canadian justice system at its best

  • @TheMissPoovey
    @TheMissPoovey Місяць тому +5

    It’s for entrapment.
    That crook put that clerk in the position where he had to defend himself.
    Clerk never would’ve hit someone if the robbery hadn’t happened.

  • @ffs6158
    @ffs6158 Місяць тому +33

    I'm so sick of everyone having to behave PERFECTLY when they're robbed, attacked, whatever when defending themselves or they get to go to jail because some criminal got hurt. This commie western world is insane. You can't do anything without the government punishing you, even being a victim.

  • @alexscottthompson812
    @alexscottthompson812 Місяць тому +18

    Expecting people to figure and calculate the EXACT amount of force the law will deem appropriate while defending their lives is an insane ask

    • @PunchingDummy
      @PunchingDummy Місяць тому

      What's so insane about it? Society expects police officers to do this ALL THE FRIGGIN TIME.
      And before anyone here starts with "but they're trained to", ask yourself why a private citizen who CHOOSES to put themselves in a situation where they'll have to use force shouldn't also be trained AND have a good grasp of the related laws governing such.

    • @Free4ever22
      @Free4ever22 Місяць тому +5

      @@PunchingDummy are you saying that every person that is not locked in solitary confinement should get the same training as a police officer? because if you are anywhere other than there you have an alarmingly high chance to just be attacked. or are you saying all retail employees and store clerks should be trained as both police and lawyers? because that makes no sense. Have you left your house? do you have training and a good grasp of the related laws governing such?

    • @KaiHenningsen
      @KaiHenningsen Місяць тому +5

      @@PunchingDummy (1) Most (I believe) cases where there's a public outcry about a police officer's use of force are not even remotely self-defense. (2) If you're attacked (as someone whose job description does not include violence), you did *not* "CHOOSE to put yourself in a situation where you'll have to use force", someone else made that choice for you.
      It's not clear to me how the current case should be judged, but I don't think much of your argument here.
      I do believe in the general principles: first, self-defense is allowed; second, force must not be disproportional to defense; third, you use what you have available (it's not your fault someone else chose their attack when you had whatever and not something closer to the necessary minimum); fourth, a slight miscalculation is excusable. However, there are a lot of what you might call "rubber words" in there, such as what is "slight", what is "proportional", and so on. That's where my not being an expert in law comes in.

    • @DylanYoung
      @DylanYoung Місяць тому +3

      Wait, so every store clerk is choosing to put themselves in a deadly situation? That's cray cray.

    • @hnraj9441
      @hnraj9441 Місяць тому +2

      ​@@PunchingDummy what choice did he make exactly other than to go to work that night?
      To compare cops to this is absurd.

  • @daifeichu
    @daifeichu Місяць тому

    Sometimes people need a reminder that stealing other people's property is wrong. If there is any sort of jury nullification in Ontario then that would be the correct way to go.

  • @milktobo7418
    @milktobo7418 Місяць тому +5

    @milktobo7418
    0 seconds ago
    Canadian justice seems to always benefit the criminal and re-victimize the victim. If you show depraved indifference to someone by hitting them with a bat - a potential lethal assault - then your rights should be forfeit immediately thereafter. Once the video confirmed the clerk didn't assault an innocent bystander then this should be the end of it.

    • @uncletedscabin4625
      @uncletedscabin4625 Місяць тому +2

      Previous comment deleted?

    • @milktobo7418
      @milktobo7418 Місяць тому

      @@uncletedscabin4625 yup - not sure why.. I guess reasonable comments get deleted because they are reasonable now.

    • @uncletedscabin4625
      @uncletedscabin4625 Місяць тому

      @@milktobo7418 That does seem to be the trend.

  • @RobsKoiPond
    @RobsKoiPond Місяць тому +1

    It's Canada. So the clearks guilty. What a surprise.

  • @TheQuickSilver101
    @TheQuickSilver101 Місяць тому +1

    Here in Ontario we love to prosecute folks who defend themselves.
    Should the clerk have hit the guy when he was down? Probably not but in the heat of the moment I fully understand why he did. Frankly we can barely get police to respond at all when we need them. Since we can't defend ourselves and are maximally scrutinized with little to no understanding when we do this place is feeling more and more dystopian all the time

  • @coriroo9323
    @coriroo9323 Місяць тому +8

    I hesitate, because I don't want to see people able to use the self-defense law to seriously hurt somebody for a minor defense because they are angry.
    That said though? Yeah, I ultimately agree with you. That second hit came extremely quickly after the first one, and then he backed off. He didn't pummel the dude into soup. He didn't hit him once, stew for a bit, and then come back for more. It was very heat of the moment, and once he realized the guy was down and then was in fact not getting back up, he looked distressed. That doesn't seem like vengeance to me.

  • @darcyskittens8591
    @darcyskittens8591 Місяць тому

    The clerk should not be charged. He was defending himself. He didn't know if the robber was going to grab a gun and come back. Plus, the clerk was attacked. He was not in his right mind and shouldn't be accountable when he immediately attacks his attacker.

  • @Tanjman_
    @Tanjman_ Місяць тому +18

    I definitely thought the clerk was clear until I saw that second hit…

  • @CoffeeFlavoredLady
    @CoffeeFlavoredLady Місяць тому +1

    Just because you can "shoehorn" this into aggravated assault doesn't mean you should. There is a difference between the letter and the spirit of a law and that is prosecutorial discretion. Also if the robber had been able to flee, would the cops have been able to find him? Next question, what is to stop the robber from returning the next night or week and attempting the crime again? Other then finding another bat.

  • @matthewsharp6928
    @matthewsharp6928 Місяць тому +1

    I hope the case law here changes. And sets case law for the future.

  • @sejtam
    @sejtam Місяць тому

    I agree, the clerk should be convicted of assault for the second hit, but with 'exigent circumstances' (having just been assaulted and fought off the robber) being taken into account.

  • @karenvanhook6748
    @karenvanhook6748 Місяць тому

    I've never had to physically fight for my life. I would *hope* I could calm down enough to follow the law, but I can imagine feeling like "What if he gets the upper hand again? What if he turns around and grabs the bat?" And if I hit him once, "What if he gets back up and now he's *really* pissed?" After all, it took two guys and a struggle to get him out the door, and the whole situation would feel so chaotic and unfamliar -- I think I'd feel like I was still defending my life past the point where the law would say "You have the upper hand, now it's not self-defense." I understand why the law is the way it is and I hope I'd be able to follow it, but I also really hope the charges are dropped.

  • @Metonymy1979
    @Metonymy1979 Місяць тому +1

    I can see both sides. My issue is that fear and adrenaline can impair thinking.

  • @Generik97
    @Generik97 Місяць тому +6

    If self defense law makes it possible to face charges/conviction despite not being the aggressor then it's bad self defense law.
    If he was standing over him and continuously hitting him I could understand the charge but that isn't what happened.

  • @simpsondr12
    @simpsondr12 Місяць тому

    This is one where clearly he broke the law, but also the prosecutor should use their discretion to not press charges against him.
    It's really a terrible practice that every single possible violation needs to result in charges.

  • @lewydunlop7804
    @lewydunlop7804 Місяць тому

    I think the charges should be dropped! No question about it

  • @andrewbrown6522
    @andrewbrown6522 Місяць тому +2

    Im sorry but no self defense situation is over until the other guy isnt moving. It may have looked like he was trying to get back up to the clerk. Had similar once with a guy who tried to bearspray his way into my place.
    Dont like dirt naps? Dont attack people.
    If it was a consentual fight its obviously not the same.
    I had a guy chasing a girl with a gun a few days ago and couldnt do a damn thing after being charged 3x in self defense situations. Cop tried to give me the eye. Wtf.
    Good on your for raising awareness for this guy.

  • @criticalevent
    @criticalevent Місяць тому

    Yeah, I wouldn't give an armed robber time to regroup either.

  • @donmoore7785
    @donmoore7785 Місяць тому

    Whacking a person walking away from you, is not self defense. Even more, while they are on the ground. A lot of people don't seem to get this. They think an eye for an eye should rule, and I don't know why that is.

  • @phylbiggs123
    @phylbiggs123 Місяць тому +2

    In addition, There is evidence of a brain injury. Though I would argue that it was a preexisting condition. This is evident by the perpetrator thing it was wise to go after someones property with a bat in the first place. The reactionary self preservative actions, plural are justifiable, as explained previously; not every person's feeling of restored security is achieved in a measurable, universal time or assumed advantage point; again as stated previously.
    💎🕊🙋‍♀️

  • @joeinthebush
    @joeinthebush Місяць тому +1

    Adrenaline kick...,cops empty their clip even if the 1st shot works... He could of pulled a gun on the ground but the second hit stopped that possibility..
    Thou Shall not steal.. And the Shepard protects the flock from the Wolves... I'd never find him guilty and sleep sound ..

  • @darkfirezero
    @darkfirezero Місяць тому

    We had a farmer over here (UK) sued because he used a shotgun in self defense the THIRD time the same robbers came to his farmhouse where he liked alone. This is not justice. I believe criminal charges were also brought and that he did jail time....

  • @marciabishop4257
    @marciabishop4257 Місяць тому +2

    Maybe you have a lawyer friend who would take his case? I don’t think this is quite fair to the store clerk. I love watching you and hearing your breakdown of the various legal issues that interest you. ❤

  • @citrinedreaming
    @citrinedreaming Місяць тому +8

    I think it speaks volumes about the clerk (in a good way) that he stopped after 2 hits, if he didn’t know what was going on because of adrenaline etc it shows remarkable self control and restraint to stop when the robber is incapacitated. I hope the clerk’s life isn’t permanently ruined (and it seems like it very well could be) by some wannabe hotshot prosecutor who is overzealous with the law (and potentially racist/xenophobic, who knows)

    • @delta3244
      @delta3244 Місяць тому +1

      I'm honestly impressed by 2 hits. Guy gets into a sudden physical struggle where he's disadvantaged from the start, gains an advantage, takes down his assailent, and then is levelheaded enough to recognize that his first hit was enough (he finished recognizing this sometime after beginning his second swing, because parsing whether someone's incapacitated or not is complicated & takes time). I would be pleased, and pleasently surprised (read: I don't believe this is true) to know that every person in Canada is that levelheaded. If that is a crime, our laws need to change.

  • @sp90009
    @sp90009 Місяць тому +8

    I really hope some good lawyer from the area will step up and provide a pro bono legal support. Would be sad, if the robbery victim gets punished more than the perpetrator.

  • @adriennewalsh3716
    @adriennewalsh3716 Місяць тому

    As someone who's been in similar situations as the clerk, it's very hard while experiencing fear and adrenaline to correctly assess when the immediate threat is over. For all we know, the robber could have said "I have a knife" or "I'll be back with a gun" etc. The threat, for me, would not be over until I could be sure the robber couldn't hurt me again. I hope they give the clerk a break on this one. He's not a threat to society. The robber is.

  • @AmyRuby
    @AmyRuby Місяць тому

    I thought it said clerk attacked by bat and was kind of disappointed there were no bats in this.

  • @jediping
    @jediping Місяць тому

    100% agree with you on this.

  • @thegreyghost2789
    @thegreyghost2789 Місяць тому +6

    This is an unfortunate incident since its clear the store clerk did break the law but I think many of us faced with similar circumstances might react the same. When the adrenaline is flowing and your life has been threatened, you don't analyze your options with the law in mind, if you are even aware of the law. You simply react.