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Thread: Man who shot teen dead in hunting accident 22 years ago loses firearms licence bid

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  1. #1
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    Knowing the family and what they still go through in terms of dealing with the loss of there son.
    Also knowing a few more details on this case and the guy who shot Mark.
    There is no way he should ever get a firearms license back.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by ghosts View Post
    Knowing the family and what they still go through in terms of dealing with the loss of there son.
    Also knowing a few more details on this case and the guy who shot Mark.
    There is no way he should ever get a firearms license back.
    @ghosts
    Good to hear the other side of the story albeit about a bad circumstance.
    Your restraint is commendable.
    Micky Duck likes this.

  3. #3
    Bos
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    Quote Originally Posted by ghosts View Post
    Knowing the family and what they still go through in terms of dealing with the loss of there son.
    Also knowing a few more details on this case and the guy who shot Mark.
    There is no way he should ever get a firearms license back.
    I guess its easy to sit in front of a laptop and play judge and jury on a public forum without knowing any details.
    Seems like he's got a few options to still get out there, without the need to have his fal reinstated. Lots of issues to consider but as a hunter, he's surely committed the worst crime there is.
    Frogfeatures and systolic like this.

  4. #4
    Bah, humbug ! Frogfeatures's Avatar
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    @Cordite fair point.
    I guess 2 wrongs don’t make a right.
    Speaking personally if I’d shot another person through negligence, I doubt I’d ever want to handle a firearm again.
    Just my take on the situation
    Cordite likes this.
    He nui to ngaromanga, he iti to putanga.

    You depart with mighty boasts, but you come back having done little.
    Sounds like a typical hunting trip !

  5. #5
    Member Cordite's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frogfeatures View Post
    @Cordite fair point.
    I guess 2 wrongs don’t make a right.
    Speaking personally if I’d shot another person through negligence, I doubt I’d ever want to handle a firearm again.
    Just my take on the situation
    @Frogfeatures

    Yes, same here, plenty other hobbies to take up instead. Aren't we all glad this story is not about us.
    Frogfeatures and rewa like this.
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  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frogfeatures View Post
    @Cordite fair point.
    I guess 2 wrongs don’t make a right.
    Speaking personally if I’d shot another person through negligence, I doubt I’d ever want to handle a firearm again.
    Just my take on the situation
    If anyone has been driving a car and hit /killed someone in a crash ( I hesitate to use the word accident) would you expect them to give up their license for life and never drive again? If a racing accident ends in someone dying, it would be very hard to face driving again, but could that driver get back in a car and drive either competitively or asa normal person?

    I can only hope there s more to his background that has not been published. Maybe there is something there that would preclude him from reinstatement. But if not, the after 22 years I think he would have been considered. Your situation can change over time and someone who was once suitable, fit and proper for a F/A license may no longer be fit and proper. Surely this goes the other way too. Someone who may not have been fit and proper 20 years ago may well be now a fit and proper person. (Think as an example a teenage boy racer with many speeding tickets and infringements modified cars and fluting the law as a teen would not be fit and proper as his judgement is clearly not capable of acting responsible enough for firearms, but n his 30s as an adult, with a couple kids, wife and career / profession and a clear change in direction of his life may now be the very definition of fit and proper) So to hold his status because of something that long ago seems off. But lets be honest, its not like the media to report the whole story and truth, just enough to push their own agenda....

  7. #7
    Member Cordite's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by systolic View Post
    Southland police area commander inspector Joel Lamb said he had spoken to police officers in Tuatapere and they had expressed concern about the feelings in the community if Diack were to be granted a firearms licence.

    Lamb said the major reason police had refused Diack's application for a firearms application was due to the 1996 shooting.

    He didn't accept the incidents in 2013 and 2014 were minor.

    "Incidents involving violence aren't minor."

    A long-time mate of Diack's, John Munro, said he did not get the feeling the Tuatapere community was divided over the 1996 shooting.

    Diack was a respected member of the community and it was not in his nature to be aggressive, Munro said.

    - The Southland Times
    @systolic,

    Sure, the judge concluded he was not fit and proper, but chiefly based on an accident he was involved in 22yrs ago.

    One thing is what the judge concludes, the other thing is what brought the court case about. There would be no court case if the police just granted him his FAL on application.

    The alleged feelings of people in the community that police are hiding behind has nada, zilch, zero to do with whether someone is fit and proper. Cops referring to other cops having said that some in the community may feel a certain way if a FAL was to be reinstated is echoes of fresh victim statements being read out but completely unchallengeable / unexaminable. Should not have been admitted to the court, but clearly it was the elephant in the room.

    Police did throw in the kitchen sink with the more recent incidents, but that was all that was, they were not the reason police refused his license. In spite of chief cop saying incidents involving violence are not minor, in this case he contradicts himself insofar that he implies the violent incidents were not the police's major reason for declining the FAL application. In other words, they were minor in that regard.

    Plenty FAL holders in the community are known by Police to have done similar stupid minor stunts but did not lose their FAL over it. No, this is about branding someone permanently and irredeemably unfit and improper.
    Last edited by Cordite; 07-07-2018 at 05:51 PM.
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  8. #8
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    Question, do we know of ANYONE successfully applying for reinstatement of his FAL after being involved in an accidental shooting?
    An itch ... is ... a desire to scratch

  9. #9
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    yip Maca49 there are some glaring hypocracies in our legal system.....someone brought up rugby....do you fellas remember the case in Timaru a few years back where two chaps got into scuffle outside pub and one got punched then hit head on pavement and died..the young fella who hit him (once) was being charged with manslaughter...... as for heavyweight boxers...still think the best line Ive ever heard a comentater say was during world cup a few years back the ABs were versing Irish...scuffle broke out and "the captain is lining up with NZ heavyweight champ" it was rather comicle as SBW was just itching for excuse to let loose...thankfully the Irish chap saw sense and didnt throw punch.

  10. #10
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    @timattalon

    Argument for driving license reinstatement is that people need to drive, it causes them hardship not to have a license, unable to work, do school run, take kids to violin lessons etc etc. Those are of course relatively minor concerns compared to the risk of death and injury - but people get their licenses back.

    Same argument of necessity is not as readily made for a firearms license. Other hobbies available. Still, the unsuccessful FAL applicant here is a middle aged man in a rural area, well out in the sticks, and shooting sports is likely a major pastime for most of his friends. Excluded in a very real way, with predictable negative effect on his health. But the actual the risk to human life of him having a FAL, at least based on the 1996 accident, is minuscule - particularly compared to being a car driver.

    I get it the two later incidents featured in the latest decision, but as he applied 5-6 times for his FAL, the first turn down at least was not done for any other reason than that 1996 accident.

    To repeat, I take it nobody on this forum knows of anyone who got his license reinstated after an accidental shooting.

    Wrong! Whaaaat?!? So OK if you are a drinking-and-shooting rugby player, not if you are a firefighter. Yes, the courts take their cues from the cops on this one.
    Last edited by Cordite; 08-07-2018 at 10:35 AM.
    An itch ... is ... a desire to scratch

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cordite View Post

    Still, the unsuccessful FAL applicant here is a middle aged man in a rural area, well out in the sticks, and shooting sports is likely a major pastime for most of his friends. Excluded in a very real way, with predictable negative effect on his health. But the actual the risk to human life of him having a FAL, at least based on the 1996 accident, is minuscule - particularly compared to being a car driver.
    I think his obesity would have more predictable negative effect on his health than being a bit sad because he's not allowed guns.

  12. #12
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    The Green party putting the CON in conservation since 2017

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    Reading this quote in that article raises a whole new perspective..."Police Minister Stuart Nash has welcomed the decision, telling Stuff it set a legal precedent.

    The Government was reviewing firearms policy: "I think the police need more powers
    ." More powers? They are continually trying to overstep boundaries on the ones they have now.

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by timattalon View Post
    Reading this quote in that article raises a whole new perspective..."Police Minister Stuart Nash has welcomed the decision, telling Stuff it set a legal precedent.

    The Government was reviewing firearms policy: "I think the police need more powers
    ." More powers? They are continually trying to overstep boundaries on the ones they have now.
    If they really are Nash's words then he has contradicted himself to all FAL holder's. Using this case to set legal precedent? No thanks.

    I see he mentioned the same old backwards meaning rhetoric that police policy implies:

    "It's a privilege to have a firearms licence, not a right, and we need to ensure that those that do have the ability to own a firearm meet the good character test," Nash said. "Any time a decision like this is made for the first time, that can set a legal precedent judges can follow."

    Hasn't taken him long to be brain-washed has it.

    @Cordite the Andrew Hore case seems like double standards to me.
    Tommy, norsk and Cordite like this.

  15. #15
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    I think a problem a lot of us are having here is that we can't really imagine ourselves accidentally shooting someone. We look at the level of negligence required, and we are certain that we couldn't make that number of consecutive mistakes. I know this is how I feel, and I hope I never have to re-examine that mindset. I fully accept that I am fallible, and I've certainly made mistakes due to negligence in other areas of my life. But I treat firearms safety with such reverence that it just doesn't seem possible.

    In light of all that, I absolutely believe in rehabilitation, and that we shouldn't repeatedly punish someone for the same offence, but I'm sure the people who have these incidents didn't see themselves as irresponsible at the time, so I'd be wary to trust their own judgement of their safety again.
    Moa Hunter and Cordite like this.

 

 

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