Originally posted by lazs2
If my grand daughter had been killed because of it then the next person to die would be the one running the zoo.
lazs
But then you would live in prison for the rest of your life. Far better to just sue the zoo, and live out the rest of your life in luxury.
Vigilante justice went out of style by the end of the 19th century. Even my great grandfather did not kill the doctor who murdered his daughter ( my grandaunt ) in 1892 at age 5.
He simply gave the doctor 24 hours to leave town, and sure enough, he was gone by the next day, never to be seen again. One could never get away with threatening someone like that today. But it was a small California farming town of less than 3,000 people back then.
Instead, if that had happened now, the doctor would most likely have faced criminal prosecution, besides being liable for malpractice. There were so many witnesses that saw him drinking at the bar all night just hours before the operation the next morning, that it would have been an open and shut case. My great grandfather was reported to be absolutely furious when he learned of this. Bleeding to death from a botched tonsillectomy was a rather tragic way for my grandaunt to die. It left my grandfather being an only child.
I sure hope that the doctor operating on me next week is not alcoholic.

That would really, really suck, if he is.
SIG 220