Balddog said:
Yep I agree..
I still dont believe it should be murder, but I can understand why he was convicted now.
The issue, in my view, is what level of culpability you take if you do something that results in serious injury.
Surely it is reasonable to suppose that if you hit someone hard enough to "cause serious harm" there is ALWAYS the possibility that other injury, while not intended, will be the result? It seems to be to be very easy to anticipate that possibility, even probability. Most people, when knocked over, are going to hurt themselves. The law of probability says a small number of those injuries will be serious in their own right ... and a few, fatal.
If you, as a pro boxer or martial arts expert, clobber someone in this way, is it not likely they will fall down? If someone falls like that, is it not perfectly reasonable to expect that they
might hit their head? And if they do, they
might suffer further injury? It might be a split scalp, or it might be death.
What it boils down to, in my view, is that there are a very limited number of situations in which violence is legally justified, the obvious one being self-defence. and even then, only "reasonable" force.
So, if you get involved in a punchup, you're on dodgy ground to start with. If you have an unusual standard of skill (as a boxer or martial arts expert would), then you can be expected to be held to a higher standard than Joe Public, precisely because you are trained and are likely to know how and where to hit to cause injury, so it could be argued as presumptive that if you have that training and do cause injury, you
knew it was likely to result, because you've had the training.
And, in the light of all that, if you use unreasonable force and someone dies, expect there to be serious consequences.
Did this bouncer expect the bloke he punched to die? Probably not, though I obviously have no way to know ..... and nor does anybody else, except the bouncer himself.
But from the description of the blow (and bearing in mind I wasn't either a witness to the event, or in court to hear the evidence, and I assume none of us were) it seems very likely to me that given his occupation and expertise, an expectation of serious harm is a reasonable inference, as is one of intent to cause that harm. Otherwise, why would a trained individual have dlivered that blow?
I understand your point of view, Balddog, but I don't agree. This wasn't (from the accounts) the archetypical ineffectual post-pub scrap, where half-cut wimps flail about for a while and achieve nothing more than winding themselves and looking like pillocks the observers, but a trained heavy throwing a serious punch, and meaning it. And a man died.
If this punch had been self-defence, he would have been acquitted. So, not having been there and heard the evidence, I'm forced to assume that the jury were convinced, beyond reasonable doubt, that this was NOT self-defence. Given the standard of proof required to reach to conviction, and the soul-searching any self-respecting person will do before finding anyone guilty of murder, I can only conclude that the circumstances were such that this was indeed excessive, and probably gratuitous, thuggery that resulted in a man's death.
It's easy to categorize all bouncers as thugs. That, to my mind, is pure cobblers. But there are some, and I've met a few, that do the job because they small-minded (if large-bodied) bullies that enjoy a semi-legitimate reason for throwing their weight around. I agree with sormicoft .... the quicker this type of bouncer is out of the industry, the better for everybody else, including those bouncers that are decent, reasonable people AND the punters.
Should it have been murder? I honestly don't know. But from the conviction, it seems 12 good men (and women) thought so, and seeing as they heard the evidence and I didn't, it's hard to differ from that.