Commentary


Canada – -(Ammoland.com)- It wasn’t enough that a 68-year-old New Brunswick man was attacked after three people broke into his home.
He also had to suffer the humiliation of being arrested and charged criminally for daring to defend himself against those three armed home invaders.
Michael Woodard committed a cardinal sin in Canada: he took direct action that threatened the lives of criminals – an apparent “protected class” of persons in Canada.
Sure, the St. Stephen RCMP pressed charges against Woodard’s home invaders, but surprisingly it is only the under-aged home invader who is charged with a violent crime. The two adult home invaders are charged only with robbery, presumably because as adults, they might actually go to prison for “assault with a weapon” whereas the cherished “young offender” would only get a slap on the wrist before he heads home for dinner.
Mr. Woodard now faces charges for “discharging a firearm in a reckless manner” and “discharging a firearm with intent” – presumably “with intent to harm” – but the shoddy reporting in this case fails to make that clear.
The complete lack of “reporting” done by alleged CBC news staff is appalling. They couldn’t be bothered to do their jobs, choosing instead to do the slightest of rewrites of the RCMP’s press release and calling it a day. The two documents are practically identical.
Canada’s laws on Defence of Person (Criminal Code Section 34) and Defence of Property (Criminal Code Section 35) were revised in 2012 to make self-defence easier to access in cases precisely like Michael Woodard’s.
So why was he charged with two crimes?
The RCMP appears to take a “charge everyone and let the courts sort it out” approach, but this only victimizes Michael Woodard a second time. He must now suffer a financially crippling court process on top of the home invasion he just survived.
Criminal Code Section 34 appears to exonerate Michael Woodard. Part 2 explains what the courts must consider in a defence-of-person case such as this:
(2) In determining whether the act committed is reasonable in the circumstances, the court shall consider the relevant circumstances of the person, the other parties and the act, including, but not limited to, the following factors:(a) the nature of the force or threat;(b) the extent to which the use of force was imminent and whether there were other means available to respond to the potential use of force;(c) the person’s role in the incident;(d) whether any party to the incident used or threatened to use a weapon;(e) the size, age, gender and physical capabilities of the parties to the incident;(f) the nature, duration and history of any relationship between the parties to the incident, including any prior use or threat of force and the nature of that force or threat;(f.1) any history of interaction or communication between the parties to the incident;(g) the nature and proportionality of the person’s response to the use or threat of force; and(h) whether the act committed was in response to a use or threat of force that the person knew was lawful.
Michael Woodard faced three home invaders, the youngest of which was armed with a weapon, the type of which the RCMP does not name and the reporter was too lazy to find out. Woodard successfully defended himself against the armed aggressor and repelled the other two from his home.
This makes the following statements true, per Criminal Code Section 34 (2):
- The threat was three young people, one of which was armed with an unnamed type of weapon.
- The threat against Woodard’s life was immediate. Armed aggressors were inside his home.
Woodard’s role in this was as victim/self-defender. He faced three aggressors, one of which was armed with some type of weapon.
The “young offender” he faced was armed and threatened his life.
Michael Woodard, a 68-year-old man, faced three home invaders aged 17, 19 and 19. The age and physical discrepancy between the victim and the criminal perpetrators is enormous.
Unknown – the RCMP press release does not make it clear if there was any relationship between the victim of this home invasion and those invading his home, or if there was any prior interaction between them.
A 68-year-old man facing three young violent criminals used a firearm to protect himself. In this case, the use of deadly force is clearly acceptable – if for no other reason than it was three on one, and the age differential between victim and assailants was vast.
Michael Woodard’s use of force was in response to an act or acts he knew were illegal. The threat he faced was not lawful.
Given the facts listed above, his actions were legal. So why was Michael Woodard charged at all?
Do the RCMP really consider the lives of three young violent criminals more valuable than the law-abiding homeowner they terrorized?
You may recall the case of Port Colborne, Ontario, resident, Ian Thomson, who was also charged with criminal offences after daring to defend his life and home against three masked men attempting to burn him alive. Like Thomson, Michael Woodard’s life will be shredded by Crown prosecutors intent on imprisoning the victim of the crime, not the perpetrator.
The Crown prosecutor in this case should drop all charges against Michael Woodard and formally apologize on behalf of both his office and the RCMP.
About:
The CSSA is the voice of the sport shooter and firearms enthusiast in Canada. Our national membership supports and promotes Canada’s firearms heritage, traditional target shooting competition, modern action shooting sports, hunting, and archery. We support and sponsor competitions and youth programs that promote these Canadian heritage activities. Website www.cdnshootingsports.org
The NFA and CSSA should support this fellow.
The police who laid charges against him should themselves be charged for abuse of the system, just because they can go around laying charges against anyone they want doesn’t mean it is legal for them to do so.
In my opinion NFA must get involved as an interested party and defend Mr. Woodward. NFA should make its feelings known to the Minister of Public Safety. There is a Federal election coming up and the last thing that the politicians need is a bunch of “lawful firearm owner ” getting their backs up (again). I think NFA should get off its rant about some type of firearm being declassified. Deer and duck hunters don’t really care about this limited interest firearm. (Something from Sweden?) If I don’t soon see NFA getting in the face of the Feds, they will… Read more »
It’s difficult to believe that you have to justify yourself when threats like this happen. But the RCMP is just lazy, if they took the time to interogate the victim they’d soon find out that he was simply protecting himself and not responsible for any crime. Instead they take the easy way and charge the victim and leave him to his own defense. The Crown should be held responsible for all laywer fees when such blatent laziness on the part of the law officers is apparent and the fees charged back to the police force responsible for the charges against… Read more »
The real reason Kevin Vickers didn’t have to face criminal charges for shooting the Parliament Hill terrorist is because the House of Commons sergeant-at-arms is an ex-RCMP officer. No charges for cops, or former cops, or friends of cops. All other regular citizens face “charge everyone and let the courts sort it out” justice. If you call that justice.
So if I use my Hawaiian sling fishing spear or my bow am I still charged or only if I use my 22 rim fire rifle? How does trip wires and leg hold trapes is there anything I can do in my home fo feel safe? With out my government turning the Canadian pinkertons criminals against me?
So what can a Canadian citizen do to change this injustice? Even a 16 year old kid can overpower a senior citizen, once you stop paying interest and income tax you are expendable is what I see,retired means you don’t pay only land and pension tax,the 3 assailants have many years left for the Canadian government to suck money out of their existence. My god when will this madness about firearms end? GUNS ARE A TOOL! to gather food,target shoot,and yes personnel protection whether it be wild animal or tame mammals (the human evel criminal) who do I write to… Read more »