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To: DGHoodini

I love it: threatening to raise a stink and complain to someone’s boss is terrorism and criminal assault, subject to prosecution. Beautifully reasoned, sir. [/sarc]

(Sorry, just saw your reply now.)


119 posted on 09/01/2009 9:23:48 AM PDT by BackInBlack ("The act of defending any of the cardinal virtues has today all the exhilaration of a vice.")
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To: BackInBlack

As I said before...Talk to a criminal lawyer, and ask him the legal definitions of Assault, and “Making Terrorist threats”. and how often stupid angry fools get arrested for them, and are usually released, charges dropped, the next day after they calm down. What happened to Gates was neither unusual or unwarranted.


120 posted on 09/01/2009 10:54:21 AM PDT by DGHoodini (Iran Azadi!)
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To: BackInBlack

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What Exactly Does “Making a Terrorist Threat” Mean?

The crime of “making a terrorist threat” is a recent creation enacted at both the state and federal levels after the terrorist attacks of 9/11. It is a very general law that can be used to prosecute terrorists, but has been used far more often to prosecute situations involving domestic violence, hate crimes, bomb threats, and school violence. Indeed, in many states, the term “terrorist” has been amended to mean simply “criminal.”

Although the exact definition varies from state to state, generally one makes a terrorist threat if one threatens to commit a violent crime for the purpose of terrorizing another or of causing public panic. Some states laws are very narrow, meaning the threat must be very specific and direct, while other states adapt a looser approach, allowing even negligently made threats to be prosecutable.

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Assault/Battery

In most states, an assault/battery is committed when one person 1) tries to or does physically strike another, or 2) acts in a threatening manner to put another in fear of immediate harm. Many states declare that a more serious or “aggravated” assault/battery occurs when one 1) tries to or does cause severe injury to another, or 2) causes injury through use of a deadly weapon. Historically, laws treated the threat of physical injury as “assault”, and the completed act of physical contact or offensive touching as “battery,” but many states no longer differentiate between the two.


121 posted on 09/01/2009 11:04:47 AM PDT by DGHoodini (Iran Azadi!)
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