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Actually from a legal perspective you’re wrong - helping restrain someone so that they can be more effectively executed makes you an accomplice. Once again, I ask why no one is calling for these people to also be prosecuted, when Chauvins fellow officers who didn’t even touch Floyd all got heavy sentences?
No, in New York, as in most places, an aider and abettor must share the intent of the perpetrator:
So you think Penny’s intent was to kill a homeless person on the subway that day? Interesting. What evidence do you have for your belief?
I don't know where you get the idea that I think that, because I don’t. He obviously didn't. He intended merely to render him unconscious. In fact, it was you who implied that he intended to kill him; you said, "helping restrain someone so that they can be more effectively executed makes you an accomplice."
The point is that you were wrong when you say that merely doing something that assists someone in committing a crime makes one an accomplice. It doesn't.
That’s the argument from the pro punishment side which is who I was originally arguing with but it looks like it was a different user. I don’t believe it was an execution
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