Amanar wrote:
Oh my god you guys, I broke down and looked up the law.
Quote:
(b) Whoever, without lawful authority, has in his possession or uses or places, or causes another to knowingly or unknowingly possess, use or place, any hoax explosive, hoax destructive or incendiary device or substance or any hoax chemical, biological or nuclear weapon, with the intent that such hoax explosive, device or substance or weapon be used to cause anxiety, unrest, fear or personal discomfort to any person or group of persons, shall be punished by imprisonment in the house of correction for not more than 2 and one-half years or by imprisonment in the state prison for not more than 5 years or by a fine of not more than $10,000, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
Source:
https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralL ... Section102There you go, it's right there in the law. There must be intent, merely possessing a pressure cooker and not doing anything with it does not make it a hoax device. I think it's pretty obvious that there was intent to cause fear and anxiety here. It seems pretty open and shut.
As for possessing a pressure cooker with confetti in it... there's many reasonable explanations for having one. Maybe you're using it in a movie you are shooting and a pressure cooker filled with confetti is part of the plot. Maybe you want to take a picture of one for your blog post about this new story, so you can give your readers a visual aid. Maybe you want to sterilize some confetti for a science experiment you're working on. I could go on and on. But anyway, there was obviously no excuse in this case and this guy deserves to get the book thrown at him.
This is a common misconception that simply coming up with any conceivable explanation is reasonable. No, "maybe you are shooting a movie" is not a reasonable explanation in the absence of, you know, a movie actually being shot. You can take a photo of one anywhere, you don't need to bring it to a parade, and the absence of a camera would tend to disprove that anyhow. You don't sterilize things for science experiments in a kitchen cooker in the middle of a parade site, and putting paper in a cooker in the first place seems like a very hazardous way of sterilizing it.
It isn't just a matter of the cooker having confetti, it's also the time, place and circumstances he had it in. This "but there could be other explanations!" thinking is what teenagers try to use when they get in trouble at school, thinking that any possibility, no matter how outlandish, means that they're being "oppressed" if someone doesn't let them get away with what they were really doing.