Poll

Have You Ever Took Justice into Your Own Hands and Broke the Law?

Yes55%55% - 44
No45%45% - 36
Total: 80
cpt.fass1
The Cap'n Can Make it Hap'n
+329|7143|NJ
Short version I'll rewrite later, not in the writing mood but want to bookmark cause this seems to be a great thread.. Friend got raped told me.. I got in car went to dude's house, rang the bell smashed his face(with my fist), draged him out made him appoligize. Kicked him a few times, bloodied him up.. Then dun dun daaahhhh, she fucking hated me.. What the crap is with that.


and mental note, crank calls and Ax handle which I was on the other end of... For later.

Last edited by cpt.fass1 (2007-05-04 18:15:46)

DooM
Member
+28|6754

daddyofdeath wrote:

DooM wrote:

CameronPoe wrote:

Yes. I smashed in the rear windscreen of a car with a ballpoint hammer in retaliation for my brother being assaulted by a group of people. It was the second time my brother had been seriously assaulted in two years. The first time we took the culprits to court - they got a slap on the wrist and a meaningless compensation payment which they were given 6 months to cough up for. The second time we took the law into our own hands with me, one of my brothers and my father laying in wait for the group as they returned from a night out. Me and my brother smashed the car up and my dad smashed the ringleaders face in. We NEVER heard a peep out of them again.
Well yep, here is the same problem. Things like that they will always get a slap on the wrist under UK system anyway, but its like anything else imo, some kid bullying you at school you tell a teacher he will bully you more and beat you up worse, beat the living shit out of him and you will likely to not be bullied again and most other peeps will not annoy you either. I was never bullied I got on with everyone, but thats the reality.
Damn right.    ** HIGH 5**
https://gfx.tv4.se/imagesdb/editor/Lost/F45F70C1-FA44-4CFE-9992-78B8F79B4DBD.jpg

Thats daddy of death. No joke..

Last edited by DooM (2007-05-04 18:25:47)

Braddock
Agitator
+916|6737|Éire
Just remembered another story (I've been very unlucky with trouble over the years! Thankfully haven't been in a fight for a while though)...

A guy tried to mug me on Aungier St. in Dublin a couple of years back. He punched me from behind and grabbed my phone when I went to answer it and then pinned me against the wall before trying to make off. For a split second I was like 'okay, wtf ...I'll call the police and give a description of him' then I thought if I did that I would never see my phone again so I went after the guy caught him and dragged him out into the middle of traffic to fight him and cause as big a scene as possible. After hitting him a few times he lost his appetite and legged it throwing my phone in the oppossite direction to his getaway.

I went to the police station later to report it and I was right, they didn't even care. They just said that muggings can be common in that area! My phone would have been long gone.
IG-Calibre
comhalta
+226|7190|Tír Eoghan, Tuaisceart Éireann
And I thought we had left this shite behind us for good -

A man has been treated in hospital after he was beaten by a gang in Newry, County Down.
Four men, three of them masked, pushed their way into a house in Church Street.

They forced a man onto the floor and beat him with hammers and a baseball bat.

Police said they wanted to speak to anyone who saw a small white van driving away from the area a short time after the attack.
this has all the hall marks of a punishment beating, absolutely fucking sickening I hope they are caught and the rule of law prevails.
theelviscerator
Member
+19|6736

CameronPoe wrote:

Yes. I smashed in the rear windscreen of a car with a ballpoint hammer in retaliation for my brother being assaulted by a group of people. It was the second time my brother had been seriously assaulted in two years. The first time we took the culprits to court - they got a slap on the wrist and a meaningless compensation payment which they were given 6 months to cough up for. The second time we took the law into our own hands with me, one of my brothers and my father laying in wait for the group as they returned from a night out. Me and my brother smashed the car up and my dad smashed the ringleaders face in. We NEVER heard a peep out of them again.
Well you just  set your own credibility in the matters of law and politics to zero, as you are nothing more then a thug.
13rin
Member
+977|6926

CameronPoe wrote:

Yes. I smashed in the rear windscreen of a car with a ballpoint hammer in retaliation for my brother being assaulted by a group of people. It was the second time my brother had been seriously assaulted in two years. The first time we took the culprits to court - they got a slap on the wrist and a meaningless compensation payment which they were given 6 months to cough up for. The second time we took the law into our own hands with me, one of my brothers and my father laying in wait for the group as they returned from a night out. Me and my brother smashed the car up and my dad smashed the ringleaders face in. We NEVER heard a peep out of them again.
So it's cool for you to protect yourself unlawfully and illegally when the rest of the community doesn't agree with you -or do anything to help you?

Kinda like the US getting fed up with all the BS in the middle east and deciding to go in and kick ass?  Every other post of yours contradicts the previous cp......
I stood in line for four hours. They better give me a Wal-Mart gift card, or something.  - Rodney Booker, Job Fair attendee.
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|7003
http://www.transparency.ie/Files/GCRIreland2006.pdf

If you would care to read the above report you will find that the Gardaí in Donegal, where I am from, are riddled with corruption. It is big news here in Ireland. If you can't trust or rely upon the police what are you gonna do?

The Morris Tribunal issued a damning report into corruption in the Donegal An Garda Síochána (police) in July 2004. The government dismissed a superintendent and a chief superintendent resigned after the Tribunal found they had been motivated by career ambition to plant ammunition and hoax explosives. The report cited 17 members of the Donegal force for varying degrees of culpability ranging from gross negligence to being uncooperative. The report highlighted failures in management, accountability and standards.

As the Mahon Tribunal also experienced, the principal obstacle to the Morris Tribunal was the culture of non-cooperation in the Garda Síochána, which the Justice Minister described as a ‘hedgehog culture’. Gardaí primarily feel loyalty to their colleagues, rather than the law, and cooperation is withheld from disciplinary investigations and Tribunals.
The Gardaí went as far as to suggest to my father that he should take the law into his own hands because there wasn't really much they could do. That is the way things go in wild rural Ireland.

Last edited by CameronPoe (2007-05-13 04:58:28)

Board footer

Privacy Policy - © 2025 Jeff Minard