What the hell has Islam got to do with anything?
Don't let Muslims hear you say that

What the hell has Islam got to do with anything?
I hope you've never warezed anything belonging to a US copyright holder lest you be whisked off to face trial in a US court eh![]()
spot on , and if he did get let off and then a muslim man with aspergers done the same thing do you think he would get let off , no , thats why he should pay
What the hell are you on about..muslim pfff
Back to the REAL topic
The only trouble I have with it is the fact that it will be a 'kangaroo court'.
Meh, I completely disagree with your opinion I suppose, I don't think the location of the person during internet/pc crimes really has any effect at all, it's all about who he was hacking.
It matters a lot. What if - for example - hacking wasn't a crime in this country?
Would you expect him to be extradited to america in that case?
If so, how long before we start sending people abroad for things that are crimes in other countries but not this that don't involve the internet?
It's a slippery slope....
EDIT: Just to be clear, I think he's an idiot and definately guilty but he committed the offence in this country and should be tried and punished in this country.
It matters a lot. What if - for example - hacking wasn't a crime in this country?
We already practise that principle under UK law. One example is child sex tourism, you can be prosecuted in Britain, for doing something in another country which is legal THERE, but illegal here. Even though you didn't actually do it here.
I think it is the thin end of the wedge.
We already practise that principle under UK law. One example is child sex tourism, you can be prosecuted in Britain, for doing something in another country which is legal THERE, but illegal here. Even though you didn't actually do it here.
I think it is the thin end of the wedge.
You think prosecuting people for child sex tourism is the thin end of the wedge?
Out of interest, can a British citizen get prosecuted for using Marijuana in Amsterdam?
Why do you think that? The US system isn't all that far removed from ours (it being based on ours in the first place).
Out of interest, can a British citizen get prosecuted for using Marijuana in Amsterdam?
I think if you adhere to the law in your current jurisdiction, in a legal sense you haven't committed a crime.
Or do you think an American citizen who has sex with a 17 year old in the UK, should be arrested and tried on charges of underage sex upon their return to the US?
Of course not. You can't get prosecuted for driving at 80 on an autobahn just because the speed limit is 70 in the UK either, that's why all these places have different laws, and not the same ones.
We already practise that principle under UK law. One example is child sex tourism, you can be prosecuted in Britain, for doing something in another country which is legal THERE, but illegal here. Even though you didn't actually do it here.
So if I go to Germany with the intention of driving at 120mph on the autobahn, I have broken UK law? No I don't think I have.You have though, you have commited the crime of going abroad to have sex with an underage child. That is the UK law you are breaking not the law in the country you visit to have sex with children.
Madagascar has an age of consent of 21 years of age - anyone here who has had sex with a 16, 17, 18, 19 or 20 year old would be viewed as a paedophile in the eyes of madagascan law.
Who is right and who is wrong?