if you get robbed by gunpoint and a convicted felon with a gun saves your life, would you turn him in or reward him for helping you?

2016-08-15 11:25 pm

回答 (8)

2016-08-15 11:27 pm
✔ 最佳答案
Reward her
2016-08-15 11:34 pm
If you are robbed at gunpoint, you're life doesn't need saving. They are robbing you.
2016-08-16 12:14 am
Think of it this way. Imagine the U.K.'s Tony Blair in the same situation. Now savor that juicy thought. Now consider this. If the felon has shown that they have not broken the law in 20 something years and has acknowledged that what they did is entirely unacceptable and has been active in the cause of good for years now, then ask why they should not be allowed legal street possession of a firearm with a state permit to carry? I would say pardon them.
2016-08-16 7:58 pm
crummy syntax, try again.....
2016-08-15 11:38 pm
So I have a gun pointed at me and someone else with a gun starts to threaten the robber with a gun too. I would not be happy about this at all even if it means the robber decided to run away rather than shoot me first.
2016-08-15 11:29 pm
You have a much better chance of winning the Mega Millions before that scenario happens.
2016-08-16 12:06 am
It wouldn't be up to me. The police would get called in because of the attempted armed robbery. When the police asked me what happened, I'm not going to make up a story. How would I otherwise explain the robber getting shot or surrendering his weapon or whatever happened?

Also, I wouldn't be hanging out with an ex-con felon who carried guns. That's not my speed. So he would have to be a stranger to me. Being a stranger to me, I wouldn't know he was and ex-con or that it was illegal for him to have a gun. If he told me after the fact, it wouldn't naturally occur to me that he'd get in trouble for having the gun. While I know that felons can't carry firearms, that's not where my head would be. So it would have to come out by him asking me to lie for him to the police, which would only make me alarmed, like I had jumped out of the frying pan right into the fire because some ex-con felon I don't know just brandished a firearm illegally at someone and is now trying to have me lie to the police. I don't know what he's involved in or what he's trying to rope me into. I don't know that he isn't actually more a part of what just happened than it seemed -- just so happening to come upon a scene where a gun was needed and just so happening to have had a gun to become the hero. That's suspicious, and I don't know him at all. I'd probably tell him that I'd not say anything, but when the police got there, I'd be honest about what happened. Lying to a police officer in an active investigation like that constitutes obstruction of justice and perjury and is punishable by three to five years in prison. I don't know him, and if it comes out later, I'm not going to prison.
2016-08-16 12:56 am
Neither. He isn't going to tell me he is a convicted felon, and I am not going to think to ask.

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