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The way you’ve phrased that shows that you don’t know the difference between the two. The “just” bit gave you away. Whoops.
The difference between the two what? This is not a court and I am not a lawyer. Nor do I give a fuck about the legal difference. Recklessness implies a conscious lack of responsibility, which is what I'm accusing Saul of, whereas carelessness can be unconscious or lazy.
 
The difference between the two what? This is not a court and I am not a lawyer. Nor do I give a fuck about the legal difference. Recklessness implies a conscious lack of responsibility, which is what I'm accusing Saul of, whereas carelessness can be unconscious or lazy.
QED
 
The only thing any part of this conversation is proof of is that you're a bit thick and obsessed with legal definitions and that's not the post I'd chose as proof of that.
You should stop this now. You know what you’re like when you start flapping around.
 
Not really. I was right (though incomplete) the first time. Do tell.


You said: murder refers to pre-meditated killing


It doesn't. Murder is where you intend to cause harm at a level of GBH or greater that results in death. As such you can be guilty of murder when you didn't set out to kill at all.
 
You said: murder refers to pre-meditated killing


It doesn't. Murder is where you intend to cause harm at a level of GBH or greater that results in death. As such you can be guilty of murder when you didn't set out to kill at all.
Does your house resemble a court room or something? Does your wife have a very small typewriter? Do you have 12 bored looking children who sit on a pair of benches in the corner of the room? If you want the legal definition of murder in an English or Welsh court you'll have to say that's what you want. Otherwise people are going to give something similar to the dictionary definition. And they'll be right.
 
To take your eyes off the road while driving and concentrate on something on your had held device is or could be a premeditated act 😁
 
Except there's no intent to harm, which is quite important for a murder conviction.
I'm sorry but that's not good enough. Could you please state which jurisdiction you're discussing, and if possible the specific law you're invoking, whenever you use the word murder or it's just too imprecise.
 
Does your house resemble a court room or something? Does your wife have a very small typewriter? Do you have 12 bored looking children who sit on a pair of benches in the corner of the room? If you want the legal definition of murder in an English or Welsh court you'll have to say that's what you want. Otherwise people are going to give something similar to the dictionary definition. And they'll be right.
Stop wriggling and calm down.
 
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