- Joined
- Sep 17, 2023
I posted this many, many pages ago. There's nearly two hundred videos from that era.Are there any channels that have archives of the gothic king cobra era and videos from when he was living with Clint?
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I posted this many, many pages ago. There's nearly two hundred videos from that era.Are there any channels that have archives of the gothic king cobra era and videos from when he was living with Clint?
Hell’s Advocate followed by Love and Vanity.
"I called it."I called heart failure in sleep.
Can I get a statute? I am genuinely curious and not doing legal research outside of work.Wyoming has laws against just this. So Clint doesn't need to be the one to pursue it. It would be up to the Attorney General if they would want to pursue any criminal charges.
At the very least some kind of change to delivery service would happen as a result.
Which could prevent this from happening to someone else in the future.
Maybe call it Josh's law.
Stunning argument, counselor.I think seeing logs and logs of these fags laughing and hoping he’ll die during the stream is evidence they were sending him it with intent he kill himself. But it’s a moot point to speculate, let the authorities decide.
I’m starting to side eye everyone coming in like “nuh uh there’s no way I- I mean they can be prosecuted.” If ever there was a time to listen to a woman, now’s it: they can. And if it’s determined by the cops they have evidence and names, they will. America for all its faults gets off on being law and order. If there is evidence that certain people sending him liquor contributed to his death, well. Sorry, toobz. Maybe think next time you endanger another person’s life.
Between “1st degree murder” and “innocent” are a ton of other levels of prosecution. If it’s bad enough, it’s not even in Clint’s hands. If the PTB determine that there is a gang of assholes murdering humans by proxy, you’re done.
Clink clink baby. Better go clean up your browser history (not that it matters, but how many Cobra haters you think have shit on their hard drive they definitely don’t want the authorities to see? He hated sickos after all)
Actual bars and liquor stores and their employees have been found guilty for providing alcohol that led to a death as well as held liable in civil suits for wrongful death. While the situation has to be fairly extreme to be criminal, but if you actively and publicly gloat about how much you want to harm someone by doing something, then do it, and then they die of it, there are decent odds they take that more seriously than just providing alcohol to an alcoholic and then they get cirrhosis.
What you're both referring to is Dram Shop Liability.Way different scenario. A bar can be liable when someone is over served and the goes and hurts someone else, and they should have know that was likely to happen.
I've ran through it before but nothing is ever going to happen in court, civil or criminal. Cobra's conduct was completely voluntary and didn't have any legal status as incompetent or not in charge of his own decisions.
Wyoming has laws against just this. So Clint doesn't need to be the one to pursue it. It would be up to the Attorney General if they would want to pursue any criminal charges.
At the very least some kind of change to delivery service would happen as a result.
Which could prevent this from happening to someone else in the future.
Maybe call it Josh's law.
According to AI:Can I get a statute? I am genuinely curious and not doing legal research outside of work.
From what I've seen, most people didn't think it was fine, but there just isn't very much anybody could've done about it apart from clint trying to strongarm him into accepting more support and guidance, which imo probably would've just lead to cobes telling him to fuck off and putting himself in a worse situation than he already was. Even Larson was allowed to just pack up and leave his group home. I know most people here realize he probably should've had someone around to help him out, but I doubt he was considered low-functioning enough for someone to force him to let them, I don't really know what Wyoming's standards are for that though. Even if he was, he would've fought it every step of the way. Like, it's sad and fucked up, but really what could've been done without trying to completely take his autonomy away?Its crazy how many people think its completely fine for a retard with substance abuse to drink himself to death because ”thats what he wanted”. What fucking addict wouldnt want to abuse their substance of choice? ”He didnt want help”, well obviously he doesnt fucking know whats best for him. He havent brushed his teeth since he was a minor because his dad cant force him anymore, that itself is a huge red flag that this guy should have more suppport and guidance in his daily life. As son as he turned 18 and became a legal adult it went downhill. Its just sad.
Nanny state argument. The meat is in the people ordering him booze while interacting with his videos. They probably have content celebrating how drunk he gets and that's the evidence you need to collect in order to convict.How can a bar cut you off, but doordash will drop off alcohol as long they can scan your ID and disregarding your intoxication level. Seems to be a lot of room for lawyers to pick that apart.
I am aware of the concept and it's different in the way I explained earlier. It's not about harm to the consumer, it's harm to othe people because the drunk goes and causes an accident.What you're both referring to is Dram Shop Liability.
Quick AI sperg:
Dram shop liability is a civil law that holds commercial alcohol providers responsible for damages caused by intoxicated or underage patrons. It applies when an establishment negligently serves alcohol to a customer who is already intoxicated or underage, and that customer then causes harm. Harm can include injuries, death, or damages from alcohol-related accidents.
The keyword is commercial. While Doordash could fall into that category, does it apply to somome in their own home?
Probably not, but with the rise of alcohol delivery maybe the laws need to be clarified and updated.
How can a bar cut you off, but doordash will drop off alcohol as long they can scan your ID and disregarding your intoxication level. Seems to be a lot of room for lawyers to pick that apart.
The site's alcohol policy does state that they won't deliver to someone who is intoxicated, but realistically how many Doordash contractors are going to risk an argument (or much worse) with someone drunk?How can a bar cut you off, but doordash will drop off alcohol as long they can scan your ID and disregarding your intoxication level.
Nanny state argument. The meat is in the people ordering him booze while interacting with his videos. They probably have content celebrating how drunk he gets and that's the evidence you need to collect in order to convict.
The door-dash guy is just a courier, he doesn't have a liquor license and is not responsible for what he's carrying other than carrying it from A to B on time.
Exploitation of a vulnerable adult (Wyoming Statutes § 35‑20‑102)Can I get a statute? I am genuinely curious and not doing legal research outside of work.
I wasn't the one talking about the statute. I responded earlier with Wyoming Dram Shop rules but here it is again:I am aware of the concept and it's different in the way I explained earlier. It's not about harm to the consumer, it's harm to othe people because the drunk goes and causes an accident.
I thought you had a Wyoming statute tho
Is “can the trolls be held legally accountable?” Going to be the new “should Clint put Josh in a group home?”
I agree that delivery person does't have a liquor liscense and legally couldn't be liable. But that shows a huge legal loophole.
If I own a liquor store and sell a bottle and the person later gets in a accident I could be liable.
If I own a liquor store and a doordasher comes in gets a bottle, delivers it and the person later gets in accident I'm not liable.
That's pretty wild how adding a courier absolves my business. I think delivery laws will catch up eventually. Sadly a lot more people are going to have to die before it happens.
They're now arresting drug dealers after people OD and die. Now they just need to apply it to alcohol..