Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts

Tuesday, 4 August 2009

McKinnon is from Mars, Hain is from Uranus

I've already talked about this fucking mong here*, and absolutely fuck all has changed since I wrote it. It is, to my mind, utterly despicable that the Yanks only have to say "we want this guy" and our craven government will hand him over whereas we have to provide probable cause. I think that the Americans should ALSO have to show probably cause.

But that's all irrelevant in this case. McKinnon, let us not forget, has provided "probable cause" by means of a full confession. His alleged motives are entirely irrelevant. If I murdered you and said it was it was because you were hiding evidence of aliens, I'm sure you'd struggle to feel ... well, anything, really. Because you'd be fucking dead.

And if I had the slightest lingering doubts (which I didn't), they were absolutely swept away by this:

Peter Hain, the Secretary of State for Wales, broke ranks with his colleagues last weekend to call for McKinnon to be tried in the UK


As soon as that perma-tanned fuckwit opens his stupid, pompous, arrogant mouth in favour of something, you just know that you've got to go in the other direction. So, thanks for proving I was right, you cretinous mongtard.

*Go read the original post I made on the subject before you tell me what a cunt I am, please.

Friday, 27 March 2009

Monday, 22 September 2008

Social Engineering: The creation of a criminal society

The Daily Telegraph tells us today that virtually all of us are criminals, that we break the law every day, in fact it says that millions of us who consider ourselves law abiding citizens break around 7 laws per week.

The most common offences are speeding, texting or talking while driving, dropping litter, downloading music illegally or riding bicycles on the pavement. Other daily crimes include eating or drinking while driving, parking on pavements or not wearing a seatbelt.

But that surely depends on what you consider to be a crime. We all understand that Bank Robbery and Murder are crimes because they are assaults on the person or property, but do we also consider that putting to much rubbish in your bin is a crime, driving at 75mph on the motorway, or dropping an apple core is a real crime.


The Open University tries to explain Crime thus.

The Meaning of Crime.

What is a crime? Good question, but how to go about answering it? For most of us, most of the time, crime is something other people do. So why not check that against personal experience? Have a go at the questionnaire below, private and confidential we assure you. Estimate the total fines and prison sentences you might have under gone had you been caught, charged and convicted of these offences.

Table 1

Incident Offence Maximum Penalty
1 Have you ever bought goods knowing or believing they may have been stolen? Handling stolen property £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
2 Have you taken stationery or anything else from your office/work? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
3 Have you ever used the firm's telephone for personal calls? Dishonestly abstracting electricity £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
4 Have you ever kept money if you received too much in change? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
5 Have you kept money found in the street? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
6 Have you taken ‘souvenirs’ from a pub/hotel? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
7 Have you ever left a shop without paying in full for your purchases? Making off without payment £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
8 Have you used a television without buying a licence? Using a television without a licence £1,000 fine
9 Have you ever fiddled your expenses? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
10 Have you ever been in possession of cannabis? Misuse of drugs £2,500 and/or 3 months imprisonment
Total Fine =
Prison Sentence =

(Source: Muncie and McLaughlin, 1996, p. 37)


How can these different senses of crime be reconciled with each other? Have another look at the questionnaire. Does it assume a particular way of thinking about crime? The Maximum Penalty column is the give-away. All of the offences carry fines or the possibility of imprisonment. So there is an assumption that crimes are acts that are codified in law; in this case a law that has been created, policed and enforced by the UK state (the police, the criminal justice system, parliament, the Home Office, etc.). Crimes are acts which break the law of the land. Think of this as the legal definition of crime.

Another place to start answering a question like What is a crime? is a dictionary. And even the Oxford English Dictionary sees things in a more complex light than the legal definition of crime. The OED defines crime as:

An act punishable by law, as being forbidden by statute or injurious to the public welfare … An evil or injurious act; an offence, sin; esp. of a grave character.

But this definition begs a whole host of questions. Ones that come immediately to mind are: Does the law cover all acts that are injurious to public welfare? Does that include disastrous economic decisions taken by the government? Does the law forbid all the sins of this world? Is it against the law to fail to honour one's mother or father? For an orthodox Muslim consuming alcohol is a sin, but it is hardly a crime codified by UK law. Is it always against the law to take another life? What about conduct in wartime or assisting euthanasia?

The reason that the OED's definition raises more questions than it answers is that the definition combines at least two ways of thinking about crime which are often in practical conflict with each other. On the one hand, crimes can be thought of as acts which break the law – the legal definition of crime. On the other hand, crimes are acts which can offend against a set of norms like a moral code – the normative definition of crime. So, the two meanings of crime can not be reconciled because a great deal of legally-defined crime is not considered to be normatively-defined crime.

However, norms come in different forms. Potentially criminal acts can be judged against formal moral systems, like religious beliefs. Quakers and pacifists, for example, would not accept that refusal to fight in a war was a normative crime, whatever the state might say. Alternatively, some legally-defined crimes might not be unacceptable when judged against the norms, codes and conventions of socially-acceptable behaviour. Many personal telephone calls from work are routinely considered a reasonable perk of the job. Keeping money we find in the street, in small amounts, is just good luck – who's going to ask at lost property anyway? Most office cultures assume that employees service some of their private stationery needs from the office cupboard.

We all want to crack down on crime

Looking again over the questionnaire, we wondered what someone reading it a hundred years ago might have made of it. For a start they might have wondered what a television or a telephone is. Can there be a crime of not paying your licence fee before there are televisions? Even on a narrow legal definition of crime, what is a crime varies over time. They might also have been surprised that possession of cannabis is a crime. It certainly wasn't when cannabis tincture was routinely available from Victorian pharmacies as a painkiller. It isn't a crime now in parts of the Netherlands.

So what a crime is depends on whether you view it from a legal or a normative perspective; what formal and informal normative codes and conventions you are guided by; what moment in history you are considering; and which particular society you are looking at. There is no simple, fixed, unassailable, objective definition of crime. The meaning of crime cannot be separated from the many and varied uses of the term in a particular society. Social scientists would describe this by saying the meaning of crime is a social construction.

The upshot here is that the current government whilst attempting to create a society where the rules and totally black and white, to keep the people in line totally, in its creation of over 3000 new criminal offences, have obfuscated the law, skewed what people in the UK have always seen as normative, i.e. civil law misdemeanour's, for which they are now faced with overbearing criminal law, the loss of liberty, fines and the criminal records that goes with it.

I feel that it is time to put Crime back in the box, redefine what is and is not a 'Crime', essentially an assault upon person or property, and return the smaller indiscretions back to the civil arena where they belong.

In making everything a crime, creating a nation of criminals, storing every detail on databases and making it available to anyone willing to pay for it, it is small wonder that people have little respect or regard for either the law, or those whose job it is to uphold it.

The priorities are skewed, the real crime goes unpunished in favour of meeting vacuous targets fulfilled by detecting the minor misdemeanour's, it is little wonder then that the citizen feels, and is to all intents and purposes oppressed.

Friday, 29 August 2008

A Gold'en Shower

This is why IT people should not comment on politics (ipse dixit):

This legal crap makes my blood boil. You can mow down a kid in your car and get off with a fine or suspended sentence. But hack into a US set of computers and you're dead in the water. Truly.


I detect a certain, rather peculiar slant to his thinking here: most people who do mow down kids in their car certainly do not set out to do so. And I'm fairly certain that even though any person who did so who probably punish themselves more harshly for the rest of their lives than the CPS would, a fine or suspended sentence for a driving death is not likely to be on the cards. Finally, Mr Gold seems to have something against motorists overall: why leap in with the emotive example of an accidental, unintended death, when there are so many examples of young people being knifed or shot, or people being targeted by actual, malicious and above all intentional criminals?

And let's just back off from the emotive language here: McKinnon knew that he was committing a crime. As a consultant, I connect to many different systems, and military systems always get plastered with zillions of warnings about how you're committing a crime if you're accessing this without due authorisation.

Funnily enough, last time I looked, "wanting proof about UFOs" did not constitute due authorisation, even if the security was lax (and I'd require some serious convincing of that, too.) He's claiming that he did no damage, the Americans are blaming him for all sorts of shit. Somewhere in the middle is the truth, I suspect.

However, the papers say this:

Mr McKinnon had become obsessed with a theory that the US was using alien technologies to create weapons and “free energy”. He gave up his job and spent hours every night hacking in search of evidence. [You may want to remember this!]

He hacked into 53 US Army computers and 26 US Navy computers, including those at US Naval Weapons Station Earle in New Jersey, which is responsible for replenishing munitions and supplies for the Atlantic Fleet. Calling himself Solo, he left a threatening message: “US foreign policy is akin to government-sponsored terrorism these days? It was not a mistake that there was a huge security stand-down on September 11 last year . . . I am SOLO. I will continue to disrupt at the highest levels.”

He was caught in November 2002 as he tried to download a grainy black-and-white photograph that he believed was of an alien craft held on a Nasa computer in the Johnson Space Centre in Houston, Texas. [You may want to remember this, too!] He was easily traced by the authorities because he used his girlfriend’s e-mail account.


So, he definitely hacked, he left threatening messages after 9/11 and he disabled military computers. I'm struggling to find sympathy.

And what awful sentence is he facing? Because old Gold seems to think he's facing the death penalty or something:

If extradited, Mr McKinnon faces trial on eight charges of computer fraud. Each charge could carry a sentence of ten years in jail and a $250,000 fine. It is likely that he would receive a much lighter sentence and that, under a plea bargain offer, he would spend six to 12 months in a US jail before being returned to Britain to serve the rest of his sentence.


Given that this was the biggest hack of all time (allegedly), this seems like a pretty reasonable trade. The Americans get to save face back home, Gazza comes home and spends the rest of his time smoking weed and playing a PS3 at taxpayer's expense in some light security prison. And when he comes out, a lucrative career as a white hat hacker, money-spinning book deals, ego-stroking speaking engagements ... it all beckons.

The difference between Gaz (and Mr Gold) on the one hand and the Yanks on the other is that Gaz seems to think he has suffered enough. Just being caught and threatened with jail is bad enough. Well, folks, I think he's clearly committed criminal activities, he's confessed to them, he should stand trial and if he's found guilty, he should pay the price. If you can't do the time, don't do the crime.

Oh, those things I said you may want to remember? Well, have a look at this:

Mr McKinnon has previously said: “What I did was illegal and wrong, and I accept I should be punished. But I am not a member of al-Qaeda. I believe my case is being treated so seriously because they’re scared of what I’ve seen. I’m living in a surreal, nutter’s film.


You reckon, Gary? I agree. The difference is, I think you're the director.

Anyway, back to Mr Golden Showers:

I'm really very, very, VERY angry about the McKinnon case. It's been badly handled from beginning to end. The Yanks will now get their xenophobic and misanthropic legal paws on a Brit and the UK government has done Jack for him.

I'm beginning to understand how Russia feels when it sees the Yanks swaggering around the Baltics. I hope the Yanks get their nose bloodied in the Baltics. It will serve them right for being the overbearing, hypocritical nation they are...


Me? I'm beginning to understand why Americans think we're self-important, overweening cocks who haven't got the balls to do anything for ourselves but go running to everyone else whenever someone stands up for their own rights. If Mr Gold thinks that a resurgent Russia bodes well for England, he's fucking wrong about that ... as well as everything else.

And if an American ever hacks Mr Gold's servers, see who does more to punish the guilty.

Thursday, 21 August 2008

Taking it up the Gary...

People are writing in defence of Gary Glitter, which I have to say is a good thing, because there has been a lot of reactionary abuse from the usual suspects and some from people I think ought to know better.

Anyway:

With impeccably spun timing, while Gary Glitter hunkered down at Bangkok airport to avoid police interrogation at Heathrow, Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, took to the airwaves yesterday to announce new initiatives to prevent paedophiles from travelling as “sex tourists”. Snatch their passports, she cried. Ground them for five years. Nail their filthy feet to the floor.

Her plans, no doubt, resonated with public opinion. In announcing them, however, she reinforced a largely unacknowledged muddle at the heart of all debate on the subject of paedophilia: is it an illness, or is it a crime?


Indeed ... the timing was immaculate, wasn't it? And which politician is going to want to stand up in front of a baying crowd and not milk it for all its worth? Which politician is not going to encourage the baying?

At the moment, galvanised by the desire to be as punitive as possible, we mix and match. When it suits us to invoke the idea of uncontrollable urges, we do exactly that - look how readily the tabloid press appends “sick!” to any mention of child abuse. On the other hand, when it suits us to argue for the throwing away of keys, as befits any rotten but otherwise common criminal, we do that instead. The truth is, it's time to choose.

If we accept that paedophilia is an illness - and there are reasoned voices who say that it is - then, by definition, we accept it as being beyond the control of its sufferer in exactly the way that we accept schizophrenia. Therefore, we should respond as such: if a man, for reasons not remotely his fault, is posing a risk to others, he should be subject to sectioning under the Mental Health Act, with all the appropriate regret, sympathy and kindness that accompanies such a move. Given the grip of the current bogeyman frenzy, it is hard to see that one playing in Peoria; nevertheless, it would be the only humane response.


I don't know if it's an illness. Sexuality is such a bizarre thing anyway, what with blood-queening, watersports, two girls one cup, anal fisting, asphyxia, etc., etc. All these things have passed me by, leaving me with a mild state of bemusement. But people want to do all these things. You might as well call homosexuals "ill" just because they deviate from the norm -- whatever the fuck "the norm" actually is.

My guess (I am not a sexologist or anything) is that it's just another proclivity but the key thing is that current Western society insists that it's one that we consider unacceptable. So I guess, after all, that "illness" might be a reasonable shorthand for "something that's not your fault but we can't let you loose in society because it has a high risk of causing actual harm or doing something that we consider unacceptable". (You'll see why I chose the last bit in a moment.)

Take, for instance, a man who had sexual intercourse with a 14-year-old girl or boy. If caught, and especially if force were involved, he would expect a severe sentence - at the end of which, he would emerge into the light of day and have his every movement monitored for the rest of his natural life. And so what, you say, shedding not a tear.

Quite so. But if that same man had broken every bone in that same 14-year-old child's body, he would similarly expect a severe sentence - at the end of which the prison gates would slam behind him and he would be totally free.


On the other hand, what do you do with the uncivilised Spanish, who feel that girls of 13 are fair (and legal!) game? Or the Portuguese who feel that 14 is OK? The nasty French are cool with 15. So those are three countries on our doorstep with long, rich histories as part of the fabric of Western society that are effectively nations full of potential paedophiles by our standards of paedophilia. Conversely, there are some countries that consider Brits to be a nation of child-molesting nonces because they regard children under 18 as taboo -- how does that make you feel?

It's a very, very confusing situation. And it's not made any simpler by people who want to have penetrative sex with toddlers who are still in nappies. Where do you draw the line? At what point do we cross over from being "kinky" to being "sick" or even "criminal"? I find the idea of sex with a two-year-old disturbing, disgusting and repellent; I also find the idea of anal fisting disturbing, disgusting and repellent. But going into google and searching for anal fisting gives over 3 million hits, many of which appear to be sites where people can voluntarily part with their hard-earned to watch anal fisting. How fucking weird is that?

If we accept that it is a crime, however, then it is something which the perpetrator can control. He may choose to offend or not, and if he chooses what is unacceptable, again we should respond as such. We catch the bastard, try him, lock him up by way of penalty and then - this is the crucial bit - once he has served his sentence we restore his liberty. In full.

This has been the fundamental principle of justice, at least within crime and punishment, that has stood us in reasonable stead since Magna Carta. Now, just because one particular category of behaviour is exciting public consciousness - pressing, as it does, all the right buttons such as “sex” and “children” - is collective gut revulsion really enough to challenge copper-bottomed, tried, tested and trusted legal tradition?


This I do agree with: society has decided that pederasty is a crime, and he's done his time, and been a model prisoner, getting an early release for his troubles. Something which would ordinarily be very happy about in a prisoner.

So, until he does something else (if he does something else) leave him be. (And if he does do something else, for fuck's sake, don't give him a fucking ASBO or a community service sentence. Put the cunt in jail.) If it's going to be treated on a criminal basis, then treat it properly. Don't create a special kind of criminal bogeyman that you can bully, while real criminal bogeymen piss on you with impunity.

I can't help but feel, as I have blogged before, that this is another case of the government whipping up moral fervour to introduce legislation against a small minority of "clearly" beyond the pale people, which same it can then use against other small minorities of beyond the pale people, and so on, until gradually more people are monitored and constrained and forbidden from travelling and so on and so on.

And if they don't have a beyond the pale minority they can pick on, by God they'll create one.


Update: while I've been trying to scrape this into some sort of coherence, Devil's Kitchen has let rip in a similar vein.

Update 2: And leg-iron ... it's the Terrible Thing...

Sunday, 27 July 2008

Proof, if it were needed...

Thanks to the Devil for pointing me at this excellent blog. I commend the whole article to you, but I wanted to highlight a couple of points:

Teenagers are not the source of knife crime, there have been teenagers since the dawn of the human race. They have been going outside in the evenings since the dawn of the human race. They have had knives since the dawn of the human race, before the dawn of the human race actually, but the dramatic rise in crime rates that we are worried about have only been going on since the end of World War 2. 50 years ago there where a lot more youths with knives walking about, but very very few of them using them to kill each other.




Perhaps you don't think that that shows an accurate picture? The definition of what is and what is not a crime does change all the time so you would have point. Literally thousands of things that where not crimes before now are, for example there has been one new crime a day since Labour came to power in 1997. So perhaps homicide rates would be better? There are fewer data, but the trend is identical.




So we are looking for something that had an impact on everybody in the country, but that affected the poor a lot more than the rich. something that happened just after World War 2 (the Home Office paper I linked to above dates it as 1954). Something big enough to change the very foundations of society


As the Devil says: I wonder what that could be?

Still think that safety net hammock is a good idea?