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Doctor Stop wrote:He should get the chair for that.
Ganma wrote:Not typo. It says in the Japanese article he stole 0.15 kilowatts. 2.5 yen would be about right ... I would think.
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Nukemarine wrote:Ok, let's put this in another perspective:
Neighbor keeps plugging his outdoor lighting into your electrical socket on the outside of your garage. Even after you tell him to stop, he keeps doing it. You unplug it, he waits till you leave to plug it in. You lock it up, he breaks the lock.
Now, how can you make him stop? If you take matters into your own hands, you get in trouble so that leaves calling the police. What can the police do? Well, there's charging him with trespassing and stealing electricity.
Unfortunately, the guy in the story lives in the complex, so there's no trespassing. That leaves the charge of stealing electricity.
Bitching that he was charged with 2.5 yen of theft is irrelevant. That's just what they officially caught him stealing. If he could have got away with more, he would have. Plus, he was warned by the manager so it's not like this was a "Didn't Know" and more of a "Make me stop, I dare you".
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:OK, fair enough argument. He was wrong, committed an offense after repeated warnings and duly punished. You've justified that.
Can you now justify the expense incurred by taxpayers to come up with this Pyrrhic victory? And how much value has it brought to broader society as a whole?
To be, this case is a gross abuse of authoritative power and those authorities that allowed it to come so far -- admittedly while only doing their jobs -- are guilty of crimes against taxpayers by negligently misusing public money. It shouldn't be allowed to happen.
If they're going to waste so much money, spend it on the guy so down he needs to steal 2.5 yen's worth of electricity.
Ketou wrote:Well said.
This is on par with the 2 knobs in the closet.
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:Can you now justify the expense incurred by taxpayers to come up with this Pyrrhic victory? And how much value has it brought to broader society as a whole?
To be frank, this case is a gross abuse of authoritative power and those authorities that allowed it to come so far -- admittedly while only doing their jobs -- are guilty of crimes against taxpayers by negligently misusing public money. It shouldn't be allowed to happen.
If they're going to waste so much money, spend it on the guy so down he needs to steal 2.5 yen's worth of electricity.
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:Same principle, but worse. Think of those involved:
Arresting officer (at least one, probably two).
Police investigation/administration
Prosecution investigation/administration
Court administration
Defense lawyer costs (state-appointed for sure if he's applying for welfare)
Prosecution lawyer costs (each prosecution team must have three prosecutors)
Judicial costs (panel of three judges)
Post-ruling judicial costs (probation, etc. other duties incurred while monitoring the offender over three years during the period his sentence is suspended).
I would hazard a guess that the cost of prosecuting this guy would run into seven figures.
No wonder this cuntry's public debt is 200 times the size of its GDP....but, at least we now have a deterrent against derelicts plugging their heaters in the neighbors' powerpoints.
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:Same principle, but worse. Think of those involved:
Arresting officer (at least one, probably two).
Police investigation/administration
Prosecution investigation/administration
Court administration
Defense lawyer costs (state-appointed for sure if he's applying for welfare)
Prosecution lawyer costs (each prosecution team must have three prosecutors)
Judicial costs (panel of three judges)
Post-ruling judicial costs (probation, etc. other duties incurred while monitoring the offender over three years during the period his sentence is suspended).
I would hazard a guess that the cost of prosecuting this guy would run into seven figures.
No wonder this cuntry's public debt is 200 times the size of its GDP....but, at least we now have a deterrent against derelicts plugging their heaters in the neighbors' powerpoints.
omae mona wrote:I do agree that this case should not have been prosecuted. It is extremely silly. I am sure they could have resolved this more amicably.
But in general, prosecution as a deterrent to others is pretty important, isn't it? If the government didn't prosecute cases when costs are out of proportion to actual damages, it seems like people would catch on and notice they are immune from prosecution for shoplifting, etc. Particularly unscrupulous people such as myself.
Ketou wrote:Sure but you aren't prosecuted for speeding or running a red light either.
The problem is that the bureaucratic system is to rigid to have the ability to deal with the varying degrees of a particular crime. It is left up to the judge, which by that time is too late for the tax payer because he is billed already.
FG Lurker wrote:I think that Mulboyne's earlier reply probably hit it spot on. The guy was probably a yak and the cops wanted to nail him for something to get him off the street. This was the easiest thing to prosecute for so that's what they did.
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