This is an extraordinary thought provoking outcome and I suspect it is totally right in terms of common law as applies to any human community.
The correct solution to all poverty world wide is to simply support a minimum wage on a proper sustaining basis. Do that that this can never happen.
Yet this judge has finally asked the right question. If law serves the community does it prohibit a person taking from the community his needs for sustenance. Otherwise the law is only serving the narrow interests of single individuals. If that is the case, withholding sustenance because of poverty is actually attempted murder. Offing responsibility back to the community merely confirms the judge's decision
Wow!
Italian Court Rules Stealing Food is Not a Crime If You are Poor and Hungry
Tuesday, May 03, 2016
The case is 'a new principle, and it might lead to a more frequent application of the state of necessity linked to poverty situations'
The case is 'a new principle, and it might lead to a more frequent application of the state of necessity linked to poverty situations'
http://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/05/03/italian-court-rules-stealing-food-not-crime-if-you-are-poor-and-hungry
The man was convicted of stealing less than $5 of food. (Photo: scribbletaylor/flickr/cc)
Stealing food if you are hungry and poor is not a crime, Italy's highest appeals court ruled on Monday.
Judges with the Supreme Court of Cassation overturned a theft
conviction against a Ukrainian man who stole $4.50 (€4.07) of sausage
and cheese from a supermarket in Genoa in 2011, finding that he had
taken the food "in the face of immediate and essential need for
nourishment."
In 2015, the man, Roman Ostriakov, was sentenced to six months in jail and ordered to pay a $115 (€100) fine.
"The condition of the defendant and the circumstances in which the
merchandise theft took place prove that he took possession of that small
amount of food in the face of the immediate and essential need for
nourishment, acting therefore in a state of need," the court ruled on
Monday. For that reason, the theft "does not constitute a crime."
The prosecutor in the case, Valeria Fazio, told the New York Times
on Tuesday that her office had appealed in hopes of getting Ostriakov a
lighter sentence given his desperate circumstances—but had no
expectation that the court would decide he "doesn't have to be punished
at all."
Maurizio Bellacosa, a criminal law professor at Luiss University in
Rome, added that the case is "a new principle, and it might lead to a
more frequent application of the state of necessity linked to poverty
situations."
However, as an op-ed in the Italian newspaper Corriere Della Sera pointed out,
it took three rounds of court rulings before a case concerning $4 of
goods, "in a country burdened with [$69 billion] a year of corruption,"
was overturned. It is "unthinkable" that the law made no note that
hundreds of people become homeless in Italy every day, the editorial by
Goffredo Buccini said.
A former member of the Supreme Court of Cassation told the Times
that the final verdict seemed to rely on an Italian doctrine based on
the Latin phrase, "Ad impossibilia nemo tenetur," which translates to,
"No one is expected to do the impossible."
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