in

It might have ended up significantly worse.

That might have ended up significantly more negative.

C
copperwatt • 557 points
I like how they walk away in the opposite direction without even looking at the bike. ” Well, I guess I’m a pedestrian now…”

P
PiercedGeek • 434 points
I’m pretty sure he’s pissed off and looking for the dumb MFer that stretched a wire across the road. Source : I’d be incredibly pissed off and looking for the dumb MFer that stretched a wire across the road.

B
BrothelWaffles • 216 points
In my state, people that owned private property with wooded areas used to put up wires like this in the trails to “discourage” others from riding dirt bikes and whatnot on their land. The practice was outlawed after somebody got decapitated by one.

S
sfurbo • 101 points
Did it need to be outlawed? Making arrangements specifically to hurt others is typically illegal, even if the victim has to do something illegal to get hurt. You can’t make a booby trap, you can’t poison you food to stop thieves, etc.

N
NWCJ • 65 points
People would just say it wasnt meant for people, people should not have been on their property, so they didn’t require signage.. The wire was a low-cost fence to discourage big game from approaching their house.

C
Coffeezilla • 4 points
and those people are full of shit. If someone went looking for them to get their due they deserve it.

N
NWCJ • 31 points
Full of shit or not its called plausible deniability. Hence the additional law that prevents this.

M
Maine_Made_Aneurysm • 1 points
the problem lies in whether or not its actual state registered atv/hiking trail. Stretching a wire across a trail is extremely frowned upon. In maine we have people who atv or snowmobile across the state on these trails and they are frequently maintained by guides, trail clubs/groups or even warden service and volunteers. But if its posted private property outside of those trails and you’ve done your due diligence there isnt much you can do.

S
sfurbo • 1 points
There’s nothing plausible about having a wire to keep out big game when the wire wouldn’t keep out big game. They would just step under or over it.

N
NWCJ • 3 points
Now prove the person that put it up knows that. Common sense and provable in court are different.

S
sfurbo • 1 points
That is all going to depend on context. Is it common to hang wires across paths there? Do they seem stupid enough to believe that it would discourage big game? Have they complained about trespassers before they hung the wire? Even if all of that doesn’t sum to beyond reasonable doubt, it might still provide a preponderance of evidence. So while you might not end up in jail, it can still end up being expensive for you.

B
BrothelWaffles • 4 points
I’m just going by what I heard from people I knew who rode that kinda stuff.

A
Andrewcewers • 1 points
All you have to do now s hang a sign on it that says no trespassing. If they then decapitate themselves it would be suicide, not manslaughter/homicide. Edit: Fixed misspelling of the word homicide.

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sfurbo • 1 points
No, that doesn’t cut it. If you make something with the express purpose of hurting others, you are responsible, even if they have no business doing what caused the trap to spring. You aren’t allowed to make booby traps.

A
Andrewcewers • 2 points
Actually it does cut it. It isn’t a spring trap. It’s a cable blocking a road to private property that has a sign that says no trespassing. If you run into that you’re a moron, not a victim.

S
sfurbo • 2 points
That is all going to depend on context. Is it common to hang wires across paths there? Have you complained about trespassers before they hung the wire? The sign might actually make it worse. At the least, it shows that you were aware of the possibility of trespassers when you hung the sign. And it might show that you were actively combating trespassers, weakening your case. But that depends on whether the sign has been there for decades, or whether you hung it leading up to hanging the wire Even if all of that doesn’t sum to beyond reasonable doubt, it might still provide a preponderance of evidence. So while you might not end up in jail, it can still end up being expensive for you.

A
Andrewcewers • 1 points
Yawn. Dumb argument.

P
pimppapy • 1 points
Error: 500

S
sfurbo • 2 points
IANAL, but it’s more about intent than specific poisons. Is there a reason why your food contains ipecac or laxatives that doesn’t include making others take it unaware?

F
FunroeBaw • 8 points
I figured that would be the same as setting traps for people which I thought was illegal already

H
HKBFG • 8 points
People get arrested and charged for this every year in all fifty states.

L
lyingliar • 5 points
For fuck’s sake, what is wrong people? There’s a reason we don’t hide landmines on our private property. Because that’s not what a normal human being would do. And, you know, some of us don’t delight in murdering other human beings. Apparently, some of our neighbors believe incidental trespassing warrants a death sentence. America has successfully catalysed a fear of socialism into a populace of sociopaths.

G
GoodLeftUndone • 15 points
All I’m hearing is *fatality* in the Mortal Kombat announcers voice and I feel bad.

N
Nullclast • 8 points
Imagine sleeping in on Saturday and the announcer jolts you awake with a “FATALITY”

G
GoodLeftUndone • 3 points
Got another!

F
fcocyclone • 1 points
Yeah, heard of it happening for snowmobilers in particular.

[
[deleted] • 1 points
Unless this happened in the 1700s it was already illegal

K
kanonenotto • -12 points
So it was outlawed, after a manslaughter, in order to make the idiots in your country aware of the fact, that manslaughter is illegal somehow. Do you live in the USA?

V
Voyevoda101 • 10 points
“Dangerous thing made illegal after thing results in a death” Also known as: regular lawmaking activity

K
kanonenotto • -6 points
What the FUCK are you talking about. If you lay wires like this, it is obvious that you are trying to harm people. There are already laws against that. Even in your whatever SHITCOUNTRY you are from.

What do you think?

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