On Friday, August 17, 2012 5:28:42 AM UTC+1, Desertphile wrote:
> Two weeks ago I had visitors from Belgium. Neither of them have ever
> fired a rifle or hand gun, though the woman was 38 years old and the
> man about 52 years old.
>
> They mentioned that in Belgium a resident who threatens harm against a
> burglar can be sent to jail for 30 days for that threat (no weapon
> weilded: just a verbal threat of harm will do). To gun-happy Americans
> such as myself this is utterly insane, bit to people from Belgium I'm
> the psychopath.
I'm sceptical of this. In almost any scenario, there would be a
trial where it was the burglar's word against your own for what
was said. In fact, I think technically, you being there is the
difference between burglary and being robbed. We may be thinking
about home-invasion, but these crimes may also apply in business
or public places.
In either, both, or all legally diverse territories of the
United Kingdom, you would commit "assault" by merely pointing
a gun at somebody or even just showing it to them with an
offer of violence. But as self-defence it's legitimate.
There are laws about possession of real weapons, as well as
so-called "replicas", but a well-furnished kitchen probably
has big sharp knives, as well as big pointy forks, assorted
spiky things, and other dangerous items.
Citizen's arrest - in England and Wales - evidently is as
described here,
<
http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2011/aug/09/guide-to-citizens-arrest>
limited to someone believed to be committing "an indictable offence".
And I think it may not apply if the burglar, or robber, offers
to leave empty-handed. For one thing, I'm not sure that the
article is right in saying that you can arrest somebody just
to stop them from getting away; I think you need more of a reason
than that, or you used to. And if your robber doesn't finish
committing their burglary or robbery, then they haven't committed
the crime.