| | Ted,
As a blossoming law student, perhaps you can allow me to take a crack at a negligence charge:
- Ceteris Paribus, there is nothing inherently dangerous about leaving a car running with a child inside. The 2-year-old will remain strapped into his/her car seat, thereby denying the child access to accidentally changing gears, etc. A running car in park is not per se a dangerous item. Hence why it's so schizophrenic to arrest folks on say, DUI charges if the keys are simply in the ignition or the car is running. We have to stop being chicken-littles about this and recognize that a parked car is NOT dangerous. Unless you're going to make the case that the mother should have known or planned for a car thief
- Additionally, you're ignorantly using joint and several liability; it's (to my knowledge) used only in civil cases, whereas this is a misdemeanor criminal case. So don't call others ignorant when you don't know the terms upon which you're operating. Your google-fu is weak, Keer-sahn. Let's face it, if you're going to say that the mother facilitated the kidnapping, that makes her an unwitting co-conspirator with the car thief, but that's a stretch. So, bottom line: don't use civil court terms for criminal justice. It shows you don't know what you're talking about.
Also, I'd like to mention that your editorializing, while sneaky, is intellectually flawed.
You wrote:
PASSIVE NEGLIGENCE: Failure to do something (as to discover a dangerous condition on one's property) [e.g., pool, open well, unlocked car, abandoned refrigerator, loaded weapon, open car trunk, dangerous animal, -TK] that...in combination with another's act is a cause of injury.
Sorry Ted, but you're not going to convince a rational person that "an unlocked car" [running or otherwise] is again, per se a dangerous condition or state for one's property (i.e. the car) to be in. Pools, wells, refrigerators, weapons and trunks all present passive (i.e. requiring no action on the part of a child) risks that endanger(although I morally disagree with many of these...why are people responsible for the actions of others' children? But that's an argument for a different day). What risk does a running, unlocked car present to a strapped in two year old? That Britney Spears will come on the radio and the child will be scarred for life? Whereas the other examples you cite are applicable, an unlocked car has plenty of ventilation and, unlike the other examples, if the child can get in, the child can get out. Not so with a pool or an abandoned refrigerator. Are you going to claim next that an unlocked house presents a danger to a child? Should people be forced to lock up every single thing in their home just in case?
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