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Gun Owner, Not Thief, Could be Held Liable for Murders in New Hampshire

4K views 35 replies 22 participants last post by  Crowman 
#1 ·
Saw this in my morning reading.

In a case attorneys say has no precedent in New Hampshire, a federal appeals court is weighing whether the owner of a handgun used to kill three people at a Conway military surplus shop in July 2007 could be held liable for their murders.

Lawrence Secord didn't do enough to secure the .22-caliber handgun he kept at his camp in Wentworth Location, enabling his grandson, Michael Woodbury, to steal it and open fire in the Army Barracks store several days later, according to a lawsuit brought by the mother of one of the victims.

A federal judge decided Secord didn't have a duty to store his gun in a different manner, citing the circumstances of the case - that Woodbury had broken into Secord's cabin - and a New Hampshire Supreme Court ruling that individuals ordinarily can't be held liable for crimes committed by others.
Article: Gunowner may be liable

One of the commenters nailed it:

Let's say that someone breaks into my house and steals the keys to my car. Drives that Stolen car and kills someone. Am I now guilty of vehicular homicide? Sounds stupid doesn't it, that's because it is.

Guns should be kept locked safely away when not under your direct control. Come to think of it so should lawyers.
 
#2 ·
I said that this could happen in another thread. Certain folks did not believe it could happen. Well its happening....
 
#3 ·
This is not good. Secord "hid" the gun rather than securing it. I don't care if it was in a locked building. If others have access to that building, that gun was outside of his control.

This does not sound good for any of us if this precedent is set.

So, if a burglar burns through your gun safe while you are gone for the weekend, then uses the firearm(s) therein to commit a crime, you could be held liable?

Not good.
 
#4 ·
Interesting that in the purportedly "live free or die" state, there are folks who think that a person who breaks into a house (committing a crime), steals a gun (committing a crime), and murders people with it (committing a crime), is not the person responsible for his actions. Nope. The homeowner is.

I see the same mindset among liberals who somehow/some way can find a reason why a person is not responsible for what they did. Just never thought I would see it spill over into the gun owners world.
 
#6 ·
follow the money. its all about the lawyer telling the grieving people that he can "make them pay"
them being someone with something 'we' can take from them.
the kid got nothing...
go after the ...well, keep on going after who ever till we get something. by the way,
says the lawyer, i need another $5000 to file more paperwork if im going to sue for you.
 
#9 ·
Nailed it. Look for the deepest pockets and find a way to implicate them. You don't even need a rational argument. Just throw a bunch of stuff out and see if anything sticks. You know the other party will have to hire an attorney just to counter all the stuff you're throwing their way. Maybe, they'll get tired of it and settle out of court.
 
#7 ·
Secured, hidden, or otherwise, the blame is entirely on the thief--NOT the victim(s). Unless NH has a law that states all firearms must be locked and secured when not on the person, the owner violated no laws.

At what point do we, as citizens, make a stand and force the courts to stop making criminals of victims?
 
#17 ·
^^^^^^^^YEP^^^^^^^^^


This will be shot down, either in this trial, or the next go around...


Bleeting heart stupidity sometimes reigns supreme, but I don't think so in this instance.
 
#8 ·
It's an interesting question, whether there should be a distinction between an unknown/uninvited criminal and someone invited into the home. In this case, though, it seems the break-in was the key factor.

Can't imagine what's going through the heads of the screaming ninnie's looking for the owner's head. By their logic, if a stolen item gets into the hands of someone who misuses it, then the owner's liable for those crimes. Even if the item was inside a locked home? Inside a locked safe inside a locked home? Inside a locked safe bolted to the foundation and encased in four feet of steel-reinforced concrete inside a locked home? Slippery slope those knuckleheads are on.

Taken to logical extremes, such purveyors of knee-jerk illogic would:
  • Hold a person responsible for what is purchased by a robber after fencing the stolen goods.
  • Hold a person liable to cover all insured losses of items stolen from one's home.
  • Hold a person responsible for a death because one's thieved blood pressure pills got sold/given to someone else who died of zero BP.
  • Hold Ford responsible for a drive-by shooting because a Ford emblem was on the grille of the criminal's car.
  • Hold Boeing responsible for loss of peaceful neighborhood space because of the local air traffic decisions made.
  • Hold Nature responsible for sharp, pointy objects when one's lack of common sense causes pain for one's assumptions.

:frown: I was born in the wrong century.
 
#10 ·
Amazing how people misinterpret what they read. After reading the posts I expected something much different when I went and read the article. This is not a random thief stealing a random gun committing random murders. This is a family dispute dredged up by the mother trying to get her son off the hook and having a lawyer who would try. You guys feel free to worry yourselves blind over this. Here's my worry level: ____________
 
#11 ·
Let's say that someone breaks into my house and steals the keys to my car. Drives that Stolen car and kills someone. Am I now guilty of vehicular homicide? Sounds stupid doesn't it, that's because it is.
Guns should be kept locked safely away when not under your direct control. Come to think of it so should lawyers.
He needs to be sued, it’s his firearm and he has a responsibility to secure it from unauthorized access. if they break a lock off and uses it but to just leave it lying around so anyone can get at it is a different story. Texas has laws that say just that and makes the owner responsible

edit: it wasn’t lying around but in a secure cabin but not locked up. there still needs to be some better for of security if it’s that easy to get to it

“IT IS UNLAWFUL TO STORE, TRANSPORT, OR ABANDON AN UNSECURED FIREARM IN A PLACE WHERE CHILDREN ARE LIKELY TO BE AND CAN OBTAIN ACCESS TO THE FIREARM.”
PC §46.13. MAKING A FIREARM ACCESSIBLE TO A CHILD.
 
#13 ·
He needs to be sued, it’s his firearm and he has a responsibility to secure it from unauthorized access. It’s one thing if someone breaks in and steals it or breaks a lock off and uses it but to just leave it lying around so anyone can get at it is a different story. Texas has laws that say just that and makes the owner responsible

“IT IS UNLAWFUL TO STORE, TRANSPORT, OR ABANDON AN UNSECURED FIREARM IN A PLACE WHERE CHILDREN ARE LIKELY TO BE AND CAN OBTAIN ACCESS TO THE FIREARM.”
PC §46.13. MAKING A FIREARM ACCESSIBLE TO A CHILD.
I see a few problems with your analysis: The gun was in a locked house and the thieving grandson had to break in to steal it. The gun was not left "lying around", it was hidden. The Texas law you quoted was about access by a child, but this grandson was an adult and a convicted felon.

Other than that, I agree it would have been better to have the gun secured in a safe instead of hidden. It would have at least slowed him down. But then the question is, how secure is good enough? It's a slippery slope to hold the man liable for crimes committed with a gun stolen from his locked cabin.
 
#15 ·
...Mr. Woodbury could not have gotten a hold of them, and we wouldn't be here today," Tepichin said.

A felon with a history of armed robbery, Woodbury left prison in the months before the murders...


So should everyone in the world lock up their guns, hammers, cars and everything else you can think of because this clown got out of prison? If it wasn't this guy's gun that he took, it would have been something else anyway. I think they "wouldn't be here today" if said scumbag was still in prison. Maybe instead of the world having to lock up everything on Gods Green Earth, they should keep these people where they belong, out of society. Yeah, he sounds rehabilitated don't he? :rolleyes: <rant off>

All that said, I do understand that people should keep guns locked up and out of childrens' curious hands. But convicted felons will always be plenty capable of finding ways to do something stupid with other peoples' stuff. I just find it preposterous that people can be held liable for something that another adult got themselves into. :hand1:

Hmm, trespassing, slashing a screen, breaking a window, breaking and entering, stealing a hidden firearm, using it to kill 3 people. All he would have needed to do was add cutting open a safe to that and we all would be in the same boat I guess. I hope they're easy on Mr. Secord.

I also agree with claud clay about the money.
 
#18 ·
This is what the story actually said: "A federal judge decided Secord didn't have a duty to store his gun in a different manner, citing the circumstances of the case - that Woodbury had broken into Secord's cabin - and a New Hampshire Supreme Court ruling that individuals ordinarily can't be held liable for crimes committed by others."

The rest of it, particularly what seems an incomplete statement about the status of the case in the opening paragrpah
is all just attention getting for the writer. No need to get all uptight folks. Read what the Federal Judge's decision
actually was and what the New Hamphshir Supreme Court has said in other matters--"can't be held liable for crimes
committed by others."

Now relax.

(I've a hunch that the Federal Appeals court isn't even looking at this aspect of the litigation. But without the text of the appeal, who knows. Donkeys will fly before the law in this area is changed.)
 
#19 ·
Thank you Hop :redface:
 
#22 ·
I had a friend who's car was stolen and later used as a getaway car after robbing a store. If my friend had lived in New Hampshire at the time would he have been charged with armed robbery? The car thieves also broke traffic laws when trying to evade capture after the robbery. Should my friend have to pay traffic fines as well?

Michael
 
#27 ·
Just to keep the conversation interesting, maybe so. Did your friend leave the keys in the car that was stolen?
Did he leave the windows down? Translation to our home burglary of guns issue, did you actually lock your
home up when you left? Were your windows secure?

Then, just for more conversation and arguing the side I don't agree with, if we would hold someone responsible
because they failed to lock their outer door, is it that much of a leap to hold them responsible for not using
a gun safe?

Clearly, I'm on the no safe side of the issue and I do not think the courts will hold the man responsible, but
reasoning from the stolen car, stolen because it was left open, might lead to a different conclusion regarding the guns.
 
#24 ·
from the article:Those factors created an "unreasonable risk of criminal misconduct," the attorneys said, noting that Secord "knew his felon grandson was in the area and familiar with the cabin and handgun."
Hmph. By the attorneys' logic, it's a simple fact that by being a felon the state knew his predisposition and should have known such things were coming down the pike. By golly, why aren't THEY (the judge, parole board members, PO) being held responsible for their dereliction and foreknowledge, eh? Bueller ... Bueller? Yeah. :blink:

But the lawyers got their hourly fees, that's the main thing.
 
#25 ·
From the article said:
Guns should be kept locked safely away when not under your direct control. Come to think of it so should lawyers.
Locked homes, locks on weapons and even locked/safe storage doesn't stop thieving, anymore than locks on attorneys' nightly coffins would stop their daylight raids upon our sensibilities. The home's items were under lock, of course. The attorneys' coffins weren't, though.

NH: Live Free Or Die. They once had it right. Let's hope they still do.
 
#28 ·
Did your friend leave the keys in the car that was stolen? Did he leave the windows down? Translation to our home burglary of guns issue, did you actually lock your home up when you left? Were your windows secure?
IMO, the most that can be said about such steps is that they contribute to the likelihood of theft, by creating conditions somewhat more attractive to thieves. But that hardly means a person has caused subsequent, unrelated use of the item. That second, subsequent, unrelated crime is the criminal's choice and full responsibility.
 
#32 ·
Let's take the gun out of the equation.

Let's say that hypothetically, the criminal had not stolen a firearm, but had instead stolen a fish gutting knife and stabbed the victim with it. Do you feel that the cabin owner should still be charged with negligence since he did not put a lock on his tackle box and put in in a safe? Or is it simply that is was an evil gun that was stolen and used?

The tool used for the crime is irrelevant. The animal killed someone, and would have done so regardless of what he was able to acquire.
 
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