Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Canada hates women, again.

44 replies

Gncq · 05/06/2020 23:12

beta.cp24.com/news/2020/6/4/1_4969716.html

Canada has ruled that a defense that "sorry your honour I was so intoxicated I didn't know what I was doing" is fine as a defense for raping someone.

Apparently, not allowing this defense violates the rights of the accused.

“I don't see it as seriously undermining the rights of victims,” Zwibel said. “This is a rarely used provision; it's not this widespread, systemic concern.”

Right "this never happens" series 2.

You let one in, you let them all in.

OP posts:
Ritascornershop · 06/06/2020 14:49

Flo, I always told foreign students who stayed with us, “it might seem safe here, but women are not safe anywhere”. I don’t know anyone who’s been mugged or burgled or owned a gun, but I wouldn’t say women are safer here than anywhere else.

I never see flags on people’s houses, so maybe that’s regional. Ditto mining and logging that a previous poster commented on. It’s a bloody massive countries, unimaginably massive tracts of land that no-one has destroyed.

The law is an ass. I hope this judgement hangs around for a very, very brief period of time before it’s struck down permanently.

Like all countries we’ve got a lot of work yet to do on women’s safety and economic security.

Floisme · 06/06/2020 15:06

I agree about women's safety, Rita but I have to say that not knowing anyone whose been burgled or mugged sounds remarkable to me!

I was mainly in Ontario and Quebec and it was 30-odd years ago. The flags and national anthem singing really interested me. There was a sense of national pride that I'd never come across in the UK.

Ritascornershop · 06/06/2020 15:44

I’ve always felt that Ontario and Quebec seem more into being Canadian somehow, but that may be just me. We are as far west from the federal government as you can get, only around 150 years of non-Indigenous settlement out here.

I know when I sing the anthem it is with an attachment to the land, locally but also knowing that we inhabit this mostly wild country. Mind you, I’m in a medium sized city, but I know the land is out there.

I was burgled twice in England, and while burglaries happen here they are very rare. No idea why, lots of poverty, it just is not expressed in that kind of crime in my little corner of Canada. For whatever reason bike (bicycle) theft is rampant, and pretty brazen, bikes stolen from gardens and underground car parks (I don’t count it as burglary if someone doesn’t break in to steal, but I may be wrong).

Ritascornershop · 06/06/2020 15:49

Also, and I know this is wildly off topic, but the lyrics to the anthem include “our home and native land”. Currently we tend to use the term Indigenous and First Nations, but in the 80’s my boyfriend was First Nations and he always sang it “our home and Native’s land”, so I've adopted that. I was born in Canada, 2nd generation English/Scots/Irish Canadian, but I’m not native/Indigenous to the land, so that version feels better to me.

Chiochan · 06/06/2020 16:12

Does this mean I can drunk murder someone?
Coz there are quite a few men on my list that I feel the world would be a more beautiful place without. Im partial to a drink too...

DidoLamenting · 06/06/2020 16:26

Does this mean I can drunk murder someone?
Coz there are quite a few men on my list that I feel the world would be a more beautiful place without. Im partial to a drink too...

No because you have expressed intent. You had the intent before you started drinking.

DidoLamenting · 06/06/2020 16:34

This is the position in England and Wales.

Voluntary intoxication is never a defence to a crime of basic intent.

However, where the defendant has voluntarily put himself in the position of being intoxicated to the extent that he is incapable of forming the mental element of the offence, this will amount to a defence in respect of a crime of specific intent

ttps://www.cps.gov.uk/legal-guidance/intoxication

JellySlice · 06/06/2020 16:38

Is it the equivalent of not guilty by virtue of insanity, or whatever the proper wording is?

JellySlice · 06/06/2020 16:42

Except someone who commits a crime, but is considered too insane to be responsible for their own actions, is incarcerated in a secure hospital, not released with a slap on the wrist.

DidoLamenting · 06/06/2020 16:45

If I'm reading the English position correctly sexual assault is a crime where basic intent applies so drunkenness would not be a defence.

The Scottish position is less concerned about this distinction between basic and specific intent and seems to be more focused on "did you do it or didn't you?"

For example, inBrennan v HM Adv.[1977], the accused stabbed his father to death after consuming between 20 and 25 pints of beer together with LSD. He was convicted of murder and his appeal was dismissed: voluntary intoxication was considered to be a continuing element of criminal recklessness which Scottish law needed to retain in the interests of its citizens. As far as I'm awre aware Brennan stands, but criminal law isn't my area.

It's not the same as insanity.

Kantastic · 06/06/2020 16:51

And in answer to an earlier question about drunk driving - that was the context it came up in on my philosophy course. Under Canadian law, the crime was getting that drunk in the knowledge that once you were that drunk, you might do something stupid up to and including killing someone, not the crime of killing the person

So does this rapist get prosecuted for getting so drunk he raped someone?

Have to say that in my youth I had more than one night out where one shot led to thinking more shots were a good plan, and things escalated, and I'm certainly not proud of how I may have behaved on those nights. But I am quite certain that I never got so drunk I was in danger of raping anyone. And that I would die of alcohol poisoning before ever reaching that level of intoxication. Funny that.

DidoLamenting · 06/06/2020 16:54

This article is clearer on the position in England and Wales. In none of the UK jurisdictions would being blind drunk be a defence for sexual assault or rape.

In E&W it might reduce murder to manslaughter but not in Scotland.

www.inbrief.co.uk/offences/being-drunk-as-a-criminal-defence/

Gncq · 06/06/2020 17:57

No because you have expressed intent. You had the intent before you started drinking

Well, that"s the whole point isn't it.
A man intends to rape someone. Gets drunk. Rapes them. Gets away with it.

OP posts:
Ritascornershop · 06/06/2020 18:01

I think the Scottish position of criminal recklessness is the way to go. I know this sounds prudish, but I don’t understand people getting blind drunk, I don’t understand the point. Especially knowing the next day would involve a massive hangover.

As I’ve never been drunk do people really act that out of character? If in the sober hours you would find sexual assault abhorrent, would you really do it when drunk?

DidoLamenting · 06/06/2020 18:27

Well, that"s the whole point isn't it.
A man intends to rape someone. Gets drunk. Rapes them. Gets away with it

No - if he set off with that intent the defence would not apply. I'm not saying the Canadian position is correct- far from it- but if it were know he set off with that intent the defence would not apply.

Thelnebriati · 06/06/2020 22:29

Does this also apply to rape of a minor?

Porridgeoat · 07/06/2020 07:31

Or a man raping another man?

Goosefoot · 08/06/2020 01:34

This type of law has always been pretty controversial here. But it's also true that it doesn't apply to most cases where someone gets drunk and rapes someone, most drunk people are not that drunk.

But as I understand it, it's not just a matter of thinking about the most immediate situation, it's also about the larger question, what does it mean if we can find people criminally responsible if they do not have the mental capacity to form intent? What other effects would that have?

FlyingOink · 08/06/2020 07:57

the larger question, what does it mean if we can find people criminally responsible if they do not have the mental capacity to form intent? What other effects would that have?
"Insanity" aside, you'd have a load of traumatised, mentally ill and addicted people in prison. Which we do. Plus children.
But the fact those people are traumatised, mentally ill or addicted is irrelevant to the victim, isn't it?
And the cynic in me thinks it's easier to argue mental incapacity based on previous abuse or psychological issues or being under the influence than it is to argue that the defendant didn't actually do it.
If we funded our prison system properly it would be less of a moral dilemma - the reason why you killed someone would be irrelevant as once inside, you would be treated and educated and rehabilitated and released ten or fifteen years later and were able to get a job without prejudice. (Pipe dream obviously).

New posts on this thread. Refresh page