K_girl
Contributor
Interesting thought bsee65. Your hypothesis follows the events.
The question now is - is it going to be voluntary manslaughter or involuntary manslaughter? And is there a distinction between the two as there is in the U.S.? If so, it would seem that voluntary manslaughter would make more sense as it is something that is committed in the heat of passion:
"Voluntary manslaughter occurs when the defendant may have an intent to cause death or serious injury, but the potential liability for the person is mitigated by the circumstances or state of mind. The common example is killing which occurred in passion, or heat of the moment killing, such as where the defendant is provoked into a loss of control by unexpectedly finding his or her spouse in the arms of another lover."
Source: Manslaughter - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, there was plenty to indicate that it was pre-meditated long before the dive. But, when deals are struck, the facts of the case - don't matter. This was going to be a big, expensive case for Australia. The motive for the government offering the plea was more than likely, to save the taxpayers of Australia a huge amount of money to try an American-on-American crime that happened to take place in their country.
The question now is - is it going to be voluntary manslaughter or involuntary manslaughter? And is there a distinction between the two as there is in the U.S.? If so, it would seem that voluntary manslaughter would make more sense as it is something that is committed in the heat of passion:
"Voluntary manslaughter occurs when the defendant may have an intent to cause death or serious injury, but the potential liability for the person is mitigated by the circumstances or state of mind. The common example is killing which occurred in passion, or heat of the moment killing, such as where the defendant is provoked into a loss of control by unexpectedly finding his or her spouse in the arms of another lover."
Source: Manslaughter - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, there was plenty to indicate that it was pre-meditated long before the dive. But, when deals are struck, the facts of the case - don't matter. This was going to be a big, expensive case for Australia. The motive for the government offering the plea was more than likely, to save the taxpayers of Australia a huge amount of money to try an American-on-American crime that happened to take place in their country.