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DrAlexanderTobacco
Guest
If an armed police officer is attacked and kills the attacker, are they prosecuted for murder regardless of the threat to their (or other people's lives)? The specific intent of a firearm is to take lives.
Police have no particular powers or protections for taking a life, any more than any other citizen does under the same circumstances. They just happen to be allowed to go well equipped to do so. In a case of self defence (or defence of another), the legality of the tool being carried may be an aggravating factor, but it doesn't show pre-meditated intent to kill that person.
For anyone not lucky enough to be sanctioned by the home office to carry a section 5 firearm, "the legality of the tool being carried may be an aggravating factor, but it doesn't show pre-meditated intent to kill that person." is not exactly correct. Guns and knives are considered offensive, never defensive. Right to carry for self defense is not accepted by the courts. People that do defend themselves with a weapon, and escape charges, are usually able to prove that they grabbed the first thing they could during an attack - like that pensioner who stabbed a traveller with his kitchen knife a few years ago when the bloke burst through his front door. Farmer Tony Martin on the other hand was absolutely rightly prosecuted for murder for killing a burglar, because he was prepped to use the weapon rather than running to the safe, unlocking it, loading the gun etc (And he shot the chap running away, I think).
Considering the hypothetical - Tackle's carrying a knife, Tackle gets approached and attacked, Tackle draws the knife and stabs someone. Immediately, this situation is a homicide and the police need to figure out what actually happened. The police turn up, begin questioning him and what happens next is entirely down to what Tackle says, and what the police are able to get out of him on the street and in an interview. The police are going to ask him why he has a knife, he will not be able to give an acceptable answer - that he's going to or from work where he uses the knife regularly, that he's on a scouting trip and needs to urgently whittle, etc. - the only answer left to him is either "I forgot I had it" or "I'm scared of people from London", and I don't think either answer would be acceptable and would get him into very hot water indeed. Perhaps not a murder charge, but certainly one for carrying an offensive weapon. And even then, we all know how mad CPS can be sometimes - he might even catch the murder charge depending on what's said and so on.