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Having Your ID Stolen Leads to Job Loss, Prosecution

ConfusedVorlon writes "The BBC reports on the sad case of Simon Bunce. Mr. Bunce had his identity stolen, and credit cards were made to capitalize on the theft. Some of those cards were used at sites offering child pornography, and as a result Mr. Bunce was swept up in Operation Ore. The poor man was prosecuted for his 'crime', and was eventually found innocent, but in the meantime he lost his job. It took him six months to find another at a quarter of the salary. 'The police's computer technicians take several months to examine [his computers and records], and Mr Bunce could not afford to wait to repair the damage done to his reputation. "I knew there'd been a fundamental mistake made and so I had to investigate it." Recent surveys suggest that as many as one in four Britons have been affected by it. In 2007 more than 185,000 cases of identity theft were identified by Cifas, the UK's fraud prevention service, an increase of almost 8% on 2006.'"

42 of 404 comments (clear)

  1. and yet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    no one will care, because thats acceptable to protect the children.

    All ongoing posts will be the back and forth on this concept.

    1. Re:and yet... by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 4, Funny

      I have 4 children and I can bloody well protect them myself. And for the love of GOD don't let my wife catch you, I'd only kill you.

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
    2. Re:and yet... by Marful · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "They that can give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin

      "The only way Governments can induce citizens to surrender their rights is convincing them that by doing so, they will gain a measure of safety in exchange." - Thomas Jefferson

      "Necessity is the plea for every infringement of Human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves." - William Pitt

  2. This is what is wrong with... by zappepcs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How society prosecutes child pornography... like a lynch mob: guilty until proven innocent and no recompense for those poor souls that did not deserve to be labeled and treated like some monster.

    There is way too much leniency given to law enforcement in the process of stopping child pornography. WAY TOO MUCH.

    I'm not saying that child pornography is good or even just 'not bad'... I'm saying that lynch mob mentality in prosecuting anyone suspected of it is absolutely the wrong thing to do.

    Sex crime laws and their enforcement (at least in the US) are criminal in themselves. They are, at best, mostly subjective in nature and enforced with the tact of a nuclear weapon.

    Victims are stigmatized, penalized, emotionally brutalized, and then forever branded as someone that people can't trust.

    Laws are good to have. Not all laws are good laws. A law set by a community that cannot be amended or repealed is not a law, it's a dogma. These laws need some changes, big ones.

    1. Re:This is what is wrong with... by SerpentMage · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh you are not kidding here.

      My wife and I have over the children from our in-laws. And they sleep in the bed with my wife. Just like kids do.

      Though when that happens I on purpose stay away and sleep in the guest bedroom or what have you. The first time I did this my wife looked funny at me. I said, "think about it, think really hard about it."

      It took her a moment or two and then she realized that I as a male cannot easily show emotion to children... There is a barrier that I have to erect, as I don't want people to ever think the wrong thing. Why? Because of the reason you said, Guilty first, innocent later.

      And often it depresses me...

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    2. Re:This is what is wrong with... by nwf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And that's why when I've talked with folks they say they won't even get involved if a child seems to be in trouble in public except by calling the police. The laws implicitly state, "don't get involved with kids." Discipline is abuse, too, so let 'em do whatever. No wonder they end up as screwed up teenagers.

      --
      I don't know, but it works for me.
    3. Re:This is what is wrong with... by Bitsy+Boffin · · Score: 4, Funny

      Paedofinder General sums it up... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jaUkt59vY1Q

      --
      NZ Electronics Enthusiasts: Check out my Trade Me Listings
    4. Re:This is what is wrong with... by baldass_newbie · · Score: 5, Funny

      There is a barrier that I have to erect

      <VOICE TYPE="BEAVIS">Heh, heh...you said 'erect'.</VOICE>
      --
      The opposite of progress is congress
    5. Re:This is what is wrong with... by gnuman99 · · Score: 4, Funny

      It took her a moment or two and then she realized that I as a male cannot easily show emotion to children... There is a barrier that I have to erect, as I don't want people to ever think the wrong thing. Why? Because of the reason you said, Guilty first, innocent later.


      Automated System Note: put SerpentMage on the watchlist.
    6. Re:This is what is wrong with... by QuantumRiff · · Score: 4, Informative

      There was a guy running for a local office a few years ago in Oregon. On his web site, under hobbies, he listed "watching boys play". MY GOD he got hammered left and right.. He meant it coming from the fact that he coached 3 kids sports, but everyone assumed (there's that word)he was a pedo. Couldn't have been a more stand up guy, coach, active in church, always kept his word, etc.

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
  3. Re:I disagree... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's what happens when you get involved in a witch hunt, which is exactly what this bullshit is. Anyone who calls it anything else is a closet pedophile. Why else do they fight so hard "to protect the children"? They mean, to protect the children from hypocrite lying shitheads like themselves.

  4. Simon Tuttle? by memorycardfull · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or Simon Buttle?

  5. It's terrible by erroneus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    with few exceptions, 'justice' leans in particular ways. Where children and child support are concerned, it's children first and anything else is a secondary consideration such as whether or not a man is the ACTUAL father of the children.

    In a case such as this, at least in the US, a person might at least be able to sue the government for malicious prosecution and collect damages specifying that since the accusation ruined his life, that the government should therefore pay for it for a long, long time.

    I have personally experienced what an accusation can do to one's employability... not even a conviction, just an arrest or an accusation. Is this an acceptable part of the justice system? I don't think so. While it's important to 'care for the victims' it's EQUALLY important to protect the rights of the accused until there is enough evidence to prove something is wrong.

    In the particular case under discussion, they should never have arrested him based on credit card transactions. That is not proof of identity or of anything other than a transaction was made. And if no other evidence of a crime was present, the most they should have done is attempt to verify whether or not it was actually he that made the transaction or someone else. They could do much of that without even bothering the poor guy.

    The reality is that this man is a victim of a crime... not necessarily a crime that is actually described in law, but still a violation of his life. I can't see that as acceptable. I think England is one of the last places I'd want to live... but then so is the U.S... and that's where I am now.

    1. Re:It's terrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting


      I have personally experienced what an accusation can do to one's employability... not even a conviction, just an arrest or an accusation. Is this an acceptable part of the justice system? I don't think so. While it's important to 'care for the victims' it's EQUALLY important to protect the rights of the accused until there is enough evidence to prove something is wrong.


      I was accused of aggravated battery and for 6 months I was unemployable. Though the charges were thrown out my life was ruined, my family's future and security was in question, my wife left me (wow I should write a country song) and I was treated like a leper. Thanks a lot over ambitious prosecutor, especially since I have no recourse over what you did to me for nothing.

      I'm doing fine now & on top of the world career-wise. I have my pride though & those employers who were happy to hire me once the that portion of my life was over got a thanks but no thanks letter from me- I see their true colors and how they would treat someone based on a rumor and nothing more. I wont forget.

    2. Re:It's terrible by Ragzouken · · Score: 5, Funny

      He could move in with his auntie and uncle in Bel-air.

    3. Re:It's terrible by ZorinLynx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've always wondered this as well.

      Why can't they investigate these cases *discretely*, so that if the investigated party is innocent, his life isn't ruined? Do it in a way that neighbors, friends, and employers won't find out. It should be between the accused and the government until the person is proven guilty. This way, if they are found innocent, they can continue with their lives as if nothing happened.

      Unfortunately, law enforcement and the government likes to make a big show of things. Breaking down doors at 6AM, multiple police cars, so much attention that it attracts news media. The result? The person's life is ruined before it's even known if he's guilty or not.

      Discretion. Is it really that hard?

  6. Re:I disagree... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People these days can't even bother to wait for all the votes to be counted before having the new leader of their country announced, why in the world would they wait for someone to be found guilty before treating them as such?

  7. Suspicion, not ID Theft by gillbates · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This man's problems were caused not by ID theft, but by suspicion of crime. It would be no different if someone seeking revenge reported him on an "anonymous tipline".

    The real problem, as I see it, is that even though one may legally be innocent until proven guilty, when it comes to dealing with the public at large, the accused is presumed guilty until proven innocent, and sometimes even afterward.

    Mr. Bruce's problems were caused by the society in which he lives, not the ID theft.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    1. Re:Suspicion, not ID Theft by nuzak · · Score: 5, Informative

      > First off, in UK there is no presumption of innocence.

      "Innocent until proven guilty" isn't even found in the US Constitution, it's simply assumed as a part of the Common Law, otherwise known as English Common Law. It is, however, explicitly in the EU Constitution.

      But of course, the word "children" has been the magic word to dispel it.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
  8. This one is not. by khasim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you can solve the "identity theft" problem, you won't have to worry about this in the future. Whether kiddie porn is involved or not.

    And we've been over, often enough, the various means of solving "identity theft". The problem is that the burden is on the victim, not the bank issuing the cards. Despite the bank having far more information and resources than the victim.

    If we would just validate the transaction instead of the "identity" of the purchaser, we'd be able to eliminate this fraud.

    1. Re:This one is not. by WaltBusterkeys · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Banks aren't the only problems. All of the giant database companies (like ChoicePoint) have giant bullseyes on their databases for hackers. They can implement all of the security measures in the world, but the data will still leak out with all of the negative consequences.

      Each data broker intentionally has all of the information that's required to open any kind of loan account, from a credit card to a car loan to a marker at a casino. And so all it takes is one clever hacker to get that data out for a few thousand (or a few tens of thousands) of customers and *poof* he's able to create tens of thousands of fake loans by impersonating the customers whose information he just stole.

      Until we see some legislation regulating security for data brokers we'll never see the end of identity theft.

  9. Hmmm.... by Otter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And it's not like it's far-fetched to think that the people purchasing child porn might use stolen or misappropriated credit cards to do so...

  10. This Isn't Just About Child Porn by CheshireCatCO · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think other posters have missed the point a bit by focusing on the fact that this case was about child pornography. Yes, that's a particularly egregiously aggressively policed crime, but it's hardly the only time cops will use credit cards to track who they think committed a crime. (Nominal) ownership of the credit card used should *never* be considered sufficient evidence to charge someone with *any* crime. It's probable cause to investigate, sure, but not to charge. It's only about one step more reasonable than charging someone because their real name matched the screen name used.

  11. This kind of thing could happen in USA by KarmaOverDogma · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the Democratic Underground:
    http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x3100544

    "You're fired!"

    Those are the words that millions of Americans could hear if Congress passes the SAVE Act.

    The SAVE Act would require every employer in the U.S. to use so-called "electronic employment verification," cross-checking all current and potential employees' citizenship status against databases that the government itself knows are filled with errors and inaccuracies.

    And what if the Social Security Administration (SSA) or Department of Homeland Security (DHS) get it wrong and can't verify a person's citizenship or right to work using their buggy database? Tough luck. That person is out of a job, with no right to appeal. And you don't even need to have your identity stolen to be so unlucky.

    Does this idea bother you?

    --
    uR iGn0ranc3, Their Power
  12. Re:Think of the children! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hey, this guy was convicted.
    No he wasn't. That is in fact the entire fucking point of the article: that despite not being convicted, in fact despite being very very innocent, everyone labelled him a paedophile as soon as the police kicked his door in. He, and the many like him, have effectively been lynched by the public.
  13. And a criminal organization with patience ... by khasim · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Scenario: Build a database with every possible social security number.

    Next, start gathering whatever information you can and entering it in that database. By theft or purchase or whatever.

    How long will it be before you can, digitally, "prove" that you are any person in that database?

    The attacks you are talking about are just the tip of the iceberg. It would be possible to perform such fraud on a nation-wide basis. Against just about any person in the nation.

    And our system is NOT equipped to deal with such.

    1. Re:And a criminal organization with patience ... by Original+Replica · · Score: 5, Interesting
      The attacks you are talking about are just the tip of the iceberg. It would be possible to perform such fraud on a nation-wide basis. Against just about any person in the nation.And our system is NOT equipped to deal with such.

      This kind of database problem was pointed out back in 1967 in a fascinating article in Atlantic magazine.

      A committee of the Bureau of the Budget has proposed that the federal government set up a National Data Center to compile statistical information on various facets of our society. Certainly the computer can help us simplify record-keeping by assigning everyone a "birth" number that will identify him for tax returns, banking, education, social security, the draft, and other purposes....But such a Data Center poses a grave threat to individual freedom and privacy. With its insatiable appetite for information, its inability to forget anything that has been put into it, a central computer might become the heart of a government surveillance system that would lay bare our finances, our associations, or our mental and physical health to government inquisitors or even to casual observers. Computer technology is moving so rapidly that a sharp line between statistical and intelligence systems is bound to be obliterated....As information accumulates, the contents of an individual's computerized dossier will appear more and more impressive and will impart a heightened sense of reliability to the user, which, coupled with the myth of computer infallibility, will make it less likely that the user will try to verify the recorded data. This will be true despite the "softness" or "imprecision" of much of the data. Our success or failure in life ultimately may turn on what other people decide to put into our files and on the programmer's ability, or inability, to evaluate, process, and interrelate information....Eventually, these bureaus will make a network of their computers, creating a ready source of detailed information about an individual's finances. The accuracy of these records will become increasingly crucial; an honest dispute between a consumer and a retailer over a bill may produce an unexplained and unexpungeable "no pay" evaluation in the computer and result in considerable damage to the buyer's credit rating. link worth reading
      --
      We are all just people.
    2. Re:And a criminal organization with patience ... by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And now imagine you have this information because you're allowed to have it, because you're some sort of federal agency. Ain't ever been easier to get rid of whoever you want. Forget hitmen, they leave a mess (and some nosey reporters might even poke into it since you can't easily turn off free press). Identity poisoning is the way of the political assassin of the future.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  14. He had nothing to hide by BoberFett · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He had nothing to hide because he was innocent, so everything worked out in the end, right?

  15. The USDOJ Strikes Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    A little background. Landslide was the company that sold the AVS and KEYZ age verification codes for access to adult sites. Despite the fact that they had thousands of sites, and their lawyers assured them they were not responsible for content, the government shut them down and prosecuted them over a couple of dodgy offshore sites, claiming the owners were "madams of a child porn bordello," and sent them to prison for life.

    Not content with this, they then took Landslide's entire customer list, sorted it by country, and sent it out to foreign law enforcement organizations demanding they raid everyone on it. They couldn't prove anyone on it had even visited an alleged child porn site, or what they had looked at if they did, but they could use the list for "probable cause" to search the victims computers, and if they found illegal porn while doing do, they could prosecute them for that.

    Most countries ignored the US demands, except for those conducting their own child abuse moral panics like the UK. The UK ran with the list, and called its version "Operation Ore."

    So they ran around raiding everyone in the UK who had purchased an age verification code from Landslide, and managed to find porn on a few computers, and sometimes were able to terrorize people on the list into making incriminating admissions. Of course, everyone so targeted was featured in the UK press as "a person who had paid for access to child porn."

    The problem here is not identity theft. The problem here is a fishing expedition into the lives of mostly innocent people based on something which no reasonable person would consider probable cause.

  16. Not actually prosecuted by HuskyDog · · Score: 4, Informative

    My reading of the story may be wrong, but I can't find anywhere in it where it says that he was prosecuted. Perhaps this is a transatlantic definition problem. Here in the UK, there are basically four stages to a criminal prosecution (yes, I have simplified).

    - Arrest: The police suspect that you might have committed a crime.

    - Charging: The police decide that their suspicions were correct and ask for the case to go to trial.

    - Prosecution: The Crown Prosecution Service (a body independent from the police) decide that the case is likely to succeed and will be in the public interest. They prepare the prosecution case and go to the courts.

    - Conviction or aquital: A court decided whether or not the defendant is guilty and if guilty imposes a penalty.

    So far as I can tell, in this case Mr Bunce only passed through the first stage. The police eventually decided that he had not committed a crime and therefore didn't charge him. Now, that is not to minimise his suffering. He has clearly been very badly treated and he hope he succeeds with legal action against not only the web site, but also the police and his ex-employers. I should also point out that here in the UK police state, he will have had his finger prints and DNA taken and that these will now be retained forever (even after his death) even thought the police accept that he did nothing wrong.

  17. Child pornography is the new witchcraft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Child pornography is one of a few accusations where a person is presumed guilty until proven innocent... and even after he's proven innocent.

  18. Re:I disagree... by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your tax dollars hard at work... so when they demand or you hear "pay your fair share" what are you paying for, exactly. Billions are spent on policing, and finding new "prevention" methods in the criminal arena, while in medicine they are treating symptoms rather than causes. Strange how in each field, the wrong approach is taken.

    By all accounts I've read (and some old timers I've talked to) each generation expects more from the governments, pays far more and gets far less. The same is true of medicine. More toxins find their way into our food, our entertainment and such. I have old timer friends who used to be coke heads in the 50's. They tell me that clean coke (not crack and the like) made people relaxed, not hostile and seeking to kill for another fix. Strange? I get similar stories from potheads I've known in college. Strange that the police would punish nonviolent criminals, while violent rapists and murderers get acquitted? And not even acquitted on technicalities, but on mere "good behavior" or "time served" or more precisely "to make room in prison for tax cheats".

    Tax cheats?? Wtf are we getting for our "fair share" that we have been paying? Highways? There's fucking potholes in DC! Nation's capital has goddamn potholes!! I've seen private toll roads with NO POTHOLES!! I've seen private estates and gated neighborhoods, "End Municipal Maintenance Here" read the sign. Far better roads, lower crime, and my friends living there all owned weapons, and didn't ever call the cops. They had armed security, well paid armed security at the neighborhood gates. Perhaps until people stop demanding things of gods and governments, those gods and governments will have no reason to demand things of their ignorant worshipers.

    --
    " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
  19. Re:I disagree... by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Oh great, let's all move into gated communities, and do balkanization from the ground up!

    Dude, Snow Crash was a novel, not a manual.

    --
    Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
  20. Dispute on bills... by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually I had such a dispute. Damaged my credit pretty badly at the time. I still refused to pay. To make a long story short, a man's word is not worth gold anymore, a man's word is worth not a penny, while other men's words about that man are worth more than gold.

    Makes you wonder why so few people are responsible nowadays... perhaps because all they have to do is be robots at work, and vege at night. Had they had to live up to what it was they said, life might be a bit different... for all of us.

    The question that must be asked is... "what makes a bunch of bankers and liars for a living, make their word more worthwhile in people's eyes than the word of a man who actually produces something tangible and sells it for a living and therefore has at least some chance that he isn't just a liar for a living?"

    --
    " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
  21. Its because of f@cking "think of the children" by unity100 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    morons.

    yea it is. im no psychopath, badass wannabee or anything. i just recognize stellar shit when i see it.

    this 'child pornography' scare has been made into a modern day witch hunt. its totally stupid and idiotic. no less than a medieval witch hunt - you just need to be accused by someone to be prosecuted. try it. just accuse someone, and watch their computers getting confiscated. their sensitive data, passwords, everything passing through some obscure personas in local police department.

    mankind really lacking in wisdom. higher the level of disgust/horror a crime induces, the higher they are regarding that crime.

    hundreds of thousands of people around the world are dying every year due to various atrocity related events, genocides, strifes, terrorism, repression, disease, hunger. but our current overly politically correct public is more appalled at the wake of pathetically negligible percentage of child pornography cases than hundreds of thousands of people dying. what ? when a child grows up, s/he is not important anymore ? s/he dying due to hunger whilst the world has the means to aid them is not something more horrible than a child pornography case ? if you just read this last sentence, and thought that child pornography is a more horrible and bigger crime, even if a second, you need to really straighten up yourself and get smart - because you yourself are judging the seriousness of a crime by the horror it induces, not its real merit. right to life is the foremost right on the face of the earth.

  22. Corrections by geekoid · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "He had nothing to hide because he was innocent, so everything worked out in the end, right~"

    Fixed it for you.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  23. Re:I disagree... by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe they'd wait if, I dunno, we didn't advertise the details of suspects publicly on the basis of some random allegation that has yet to be proven in court?

    Getting back to this specific case, I'm not sure what's more disturbing:

    1. the fact that the guy lost his reputation and his livelihood on the basis of a tenuous link that wrongly affects thousands of people every year, or
    2. the fact that he could build a solid case to refute the charge using only a fairly simple FOI request and matching up the time and place of the criminal use of the card with records proving he was on the other side of the planet at the time, yet the authorities managed to take his computer equipment and such away for several months and take the system took several years to exhonerate him.

    And on an unrelated note, what gives with the weird styling on Slashdot since earlier this evening? Loads of HTML formatting, such as the list above, is completely broken. :-(

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  24. Re:Strange... you missed the whole thing. by gknoy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The odds are much better that you'll get shot with your own gun in the scenario you describe. Also, consider that police officers miss nearly 90% of the time when they discharge their weapons. They have lots of training up front and ongoing training in firearms use which you almost certainly do not have. What makes you think your skills are better than theirs?

    I picture the scenario as such:

    Person enters my house without permission.
    Person is either unarmed, or armed.
    Person's intentions are either to steal from me or to hurt/rape my family.

    Now, finding that an invader is in my home, I do not know how armed or hostile the adversary is. In such a case, it seems imprudent to be overly optimistic. If my goal is to maximize the safety of my family, I need to assume the worst: the adversary is both armed, and intends to harm my family. My threat-response choices should be based on this expectation.

    So, versus an armed hostile adversary, my options are, in increasing levels of severity:

    1) Run away. Get everyone out of the house, in the car, and Far Away.
    2) Threaten adversary. Accept possibility that I will be harmed in the process.
    3) Harm adversary. Accept possibility that I will be harmed in the process.
    4) Kill adversary. Accept possibility that I will be harmed in the process.

    Let us examine the viability of each of these.

    1) Run Away.

    If this is possible, I want to do it. I'd much rather avoid confrontation, and make sure that no one gets hurt. However, in the case of a home invasion, the invader is quite likely to be between my family and the exit. If the adversary is hostile, we could be at risk. (Yes, we could open a window and escape that way; this isn't always guaranteed.)

    Additionally, if I were to find the adversary already harming my family (or me), it's too late to do this (to an extent).

    2) Threaten Adversary.

    -- Call the police, and notify the adversary that they are on the way. Unarmed assailants are likely to be scared off, but I am not optimistic that an armed assailant would be convinced to go. They might take hostages. I realize this is not reasonable, but crazy people, psychos, or people who are high on $Drug are unlikely to be thinking completely rationally.

    -- Any other threat I might make (to harm or kill the adversary myself) requires that the adversary believe I can and will do such a thing. Thus, this requires that I arm myself in a manner which will be percieved as a threat by all attackers.

    A knife, sword, or spear won't do. A firearm is the weapon of choice, and I'd prefer a shotgun. Anything less is an automatic failure versus an assailant with a gun. (Yes, I know about the lethal distance. Yes, a short spear would be fantastic for CQ fighting in my house ... and scary as hell, I imagine. However, it's still an inferior threat.) A blade may scare away that burglar with a knife, or the rapist with a box cutter, but will do nothing when they have a pistol, and may even aggravate their intentions.

    Threats also have a chance to escalate into a combat situation ("You're welcome to try, have at thee!"). In such a case, I'd much prefer that I have an unfair advantage.

    3) Harm Adversary.

    This is both legally and ethically problematic, to me. If someone is an active threat to the life of my family or me, I do not feel it is prudent to try to "injure" them (not to mention that it's likely to impede my performance, as "shooting to wound" doesn't work). If someone is NOT an active threat to my life or my family, then I would be liable (legally) for having assaulted the invader. Anyone that I'd feel it's ethical to harm in self defense is an enemy which would be better completely unable to harm me, and therefore dead.

    If I could disarm them safely, and then further ensure that they couldn't hurt me or my family, that see

  25. Re:Strange... you missed the whole thing. by jhylkema · · Score: 4, Informative

    Can you even back up your claim that you are more likely to get shot with your own gun?

    Your wish is my command.

    A gun in your home is 22 times more likely to kill a member of your family than an intruder.

  26. Re:Strange... you missed the whole thing. by RattFink · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A gun in your home is 22 times more likely [nih.gov] to kill a member of your family than an intruder. Did you read the same abstract I did? This one was neither limited to family members nor death. Furthermore they do not differentiate if the it is the owner of the home or their family who injured or killed someone with a gun. To back this point up they note they include two incidents of police officers using their gun in the line of duty, making them not the owner of the house. Of course that is sort of moot since that wasn't what he asked in the first place.
    --
    "I don't necessarily agree with everything I say." - Marshall McLuhan
  27. Re:Strange... you missed the whole thing. by halber_mensch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I dunno....I like to drop about 200-300 rounds every couple of weekends. I'm fairly proficient.
    Shooting at paper targets is a lot different from shooting at live human beings while amped up on adrenaline in a low light situation such as your home.

    If someone is in my house....I pretty much guarantee I have much more firepower than they do...and I'm not even starting to ask for names till I've emptied a few clips.
    And then you find out that your your son/daughter/wife took a round or two from the "few clips" you just emptied. That aside, you are aware that bullets will go through drywall like hot knives through butter, aren't you? Guess what - you probably just wounded or killed one of your neighbours too. Now you've exposed yourself to ruinous civil liability as well as to a long, long stretch in the cooler with a cellie named Bubba who has a thing for 5'6" skinny computer geekboys. You know, I suppose you're right. You're so much better off if you just let the intruders kill you and your kids, rape your wife, take your money, and then be free to do it again at their leisure. That's a much better scenario.
    --
    perl -e "eval pack(q{H*},join q{},qw{70 72696e74207061636b28717b482a7d2c717b343 637323635363534323533343430617d293b})"