Please... you made a bold statement, were challenged about it. You have not given any actual reference or precedent to the black and white letter of the LAW. Sky News Inc., a commercial company that buys news to sell their product. They are not the Law...
The Sky News reference I gave, was reporting a UK Supreme Court Judgment. If you would the 'black and white law' in its entirety please look at the case of
the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis (Appellant) v DSD and another (Respondents) at
https://www.supremecourt.uk/cases/docs/uksc-2015-0166-press-summary.pdf. In this case the Supreme Court determined that "the state has a duty to conduct an effective investigation into crimes involving serious violence to the individual" this came about because John Worboys first known victim reported her sexual attack, but she was ignored. This very brave victim now suffers terribly by having the knowledge that if her case had been investigated, the later crimes could have been prevented.
I could go next door and tell my neighbours that I want to go and bludgeon someone....must they report it NO. Could they be open to being charged to aiding and abetting...NO!
How your neighbours react to you telling them that you "
want to go and bludgeon someone." is up to them (no doubt they will make there decision about what to do based upon what they know about you and how you present and behave). If subsequently you carried out your declared threat, as I have said elsewhere this is all a subject that is under the Serious Crime Act 2007
Inchoate offences | The Crown Prosecution Service. One thing for sure, if your neighbours were normal average people, is that following you carrying out your threat they would suffer psychologically and emotionally just by the fact that they knew you and you had said what you suggest here to them. Please, regardless of any trauma you have been victim of
@blackemerald1, do refrain from any notion of committing a crime yourself.
here is this thing called 'presumption of innocence' and the Police must get 'evidence' and the Prosecution must jump the bar of 'beyond reasonable doubt'. All of these concepts seem to be lost on you.
In the UK indeed criminal prosecutions require 'beyond reasonable doubt' evidence, but their is one exception to your 'presumption of innocence' claim, that is in the case of a death occurring and an investigation for murder, but I will not go into the specifics on this here.
In essence you miss my point, I have simply highlighted the fact that citizens under the Serious Crime Act 2007 are open to being arrested and investigated in a crime if there is reason to believe they encouraged, assisted, aided and abetted such a crime. Most ordinary law-abiding citizens would likely feel quite concerned about being arrested. To protect themselves from such an experience the law-abiding citizen might best be advised to report any incidents they are aware of where a crime has been committed or where there is a potential for a crime being committed. In this context the citizen's moral duty is somewhat pressed very close to it being a reasonable legitimate expectation that a citizen should report a crime or a potential crime.
In the context of this website where many are victims or csa and other childhood abuses such that these victims suffer PTSD, CPTSD etc., it is important that such victims know the law, just as much as it is important that they are reassured about the mitigating circumstances that protect vulnerable people such as victims of abuse. The reality that therapists have obligations concerning safeguarding vulnerable service users and the wider public (HCPC Standards of Proficiency 7.3)