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Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

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  • Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

    ISLE OF WIGHT------A judge has dismissed a firearms charge against Confederate re-enactor Joshua Silva, who accidentally shot a man portraying a Union soldier during a mock Civil War battle at Heritage Park last year.






    Mods, This Thread was posted for informational purposes and polite discussion, not a heated argument about the US Judicial System. If this becomes a problem please remove. Please move if this thread is in the wrong forum.
    Steven Flibotte
    Liberty Hall Fifes and Drums
    Confederate Marines Company C./Marine Guard USS Galena
    Tidewater Maritime Living History Association

  • #2
    Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

    So because they did not do a safety inspection he is off the hook? Thats is what I am getting from the article. I wish I wasn't responsible for my own actions.
    Russell L. Stanley
    Co.A 1st Texas Infantry
    Co.A 45th Mississippi
    Co.D 8th Missouri (CS)
    Steelville JayBirds Mess

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    • #3
      Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

      just brings to mind.. what my dad always said, it was the "unloaded" gun that'll hurt you.

      We were taught to inspect any wepon when you laid your hands on it. If you picked it up and you didn't check to see if it was loaded and dad caught you.. even if he handed you the wepon himself.. there was He!! to pay..

      dad was VERY strict about that. ... seems on some level Dad may have been right on that point. Ya Think!

      Catherine Kelly
      Catherine L. Kelly
      Delaware

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      • #4
        Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

        I leave a mosin-nagant and my musket around my house all the time. Whenever I have someone who wants to hold them or even look at them, I always teach them how to inspect them properly to be absolutely sure something hasn't happened when I wasn't looking. This is ridiculous. People need to be responsible for those under their command. Anyone know why this guy was shooting during the final hurrah anyways? Seems like a time to stop shooting, not aiming at the guy hurrahing. Any news?
        Brian Gauthier

        Rat Tail Mess
        Wolftever Mess
        SCAR-Southeastern Coalition of Authentic Reenactors

        Cry "Havoc" and let slip the dogs of war.

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        • #5
          Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

          He was guilty of negligence, but not of any malicious conduct. He is still liable civilly.
          GaryYee o' the Land o' Rice a Roni & Cable Cars
          High Private in The Company of Military Historians

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          • #6
            Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

            You know, a pistol with live rounds and a pistol with blank rounds have a noticeable difference in weight. I find it hard to believe this guy didnt know it was loaded with rounds.
            [CENTER]Yours with a jerk,
            Michael Kirby
            2009
            [COLOR="Green"]Fort Moultrie : STRANGER DANGER!
            Sharpsburg LH: Wrecking the Van (The Tripp Corbin Experience)
            Westville GA Work Weekend: SWAMP MONSTER![/COLOR]
            [COLOR="Blue"]Bummers
            [/COLOR]
            2010
            [COLOR="Blue"]Pt. Lookout Maryland LH
            Rivers Bridge Federal Campaigner Adjunct
            Backwaters 1865
            In The Van: Trailing Kirby Smith
            Before The Breakout
            Struggles of Secession[/COLOR][/CENTER]

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            • #7
              Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

              Originally posted by gilham View Post
              So because they did not do a safety inspection he is off the hook? Thats is what I am getting from the article. I wish I wasn't responsible for my own actions.
              No, he paid $1,200 restitution and took a firearms safety course as ordered by the court and in return the charge was dropped.

              This is similar to local courts sending speeders to driver safety courses in exchange for dropping the charge.

              This raises the question: Who loaded this weapon? What civil liability does that person have?

              Someone from the production company had a good lawyer that convinced that judge that the reenactor coordinator was ultimately responsible for safety inspections.

              Considering all that has been said here and other forums about the inadequate police investigation, it sounds like the police take their cues from the courts in this jurisdiction.
              Joe Smotherman

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              • #8
                Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

                It seems as if the people running the event and responsible for safety checks of the weapons should be held accountable to some degree. Hence the phrase "required safety checks" Ultimately the guy w the gun bears the most responsibility but it seems as if the ball was dropped on many fronts in this situation.
                [FONT="Georgia"]Ken Berry[/FONT]

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                • #9
                  Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

                  I did an interview with the shooting victim, Tom Lord of Suffolk, VA, for Civil War News. Tom is a retired NYC cop. The local prosecutor did not believe the shooting was intentional "because the two men did not know each other." Ergo, it had to be "an accident." There are a few details about the nature of the shooting that are suspicious:

                  1. Silva's contention that he did not know the gun was loaded is easily disproven. As pointed out earlier, there is a noticeable difference in the weight of the revolver when loaded v. unloaded. And second he may have forgotten it was loaded, but black powder revolvers "load a mite slow." It did not load itself. This was not a weapon he borrowed from somebody, but his own revolver. He loaded it at some point in time, put the lead balls right on the charge in each of the six chambers and pressed them in place with the loading lever.

                  2. Silva took off immediately when police arrived. And he was allowed to do so. They call this concept "evidence of knowledge of guilt." You know, like OJ in that white bronco with a fake beard and a bag of money...At a film set full of men reenacting a Civil War battle armed to the teeth, the police concluded it had to be an errant shot from a deer hunter in the woods some distance away. Lord had to insist that police look at the film and determine who was firing their weapon at the time (it was during a cease fire). Lord had to save the bullet they pulled out of his shoulder and give it to police for a ballistics check. The police told him it was unnecessary as "all Civil War weapons are smoothbores." Lord had to educate them on that particular fine point, too. When the police knocked on Silva's door, he feigned surprise that he had shot somebody. The bullet was checked and matched with Silva's revolver, of course. Given the way a .44 black powder revolver kicks when live fired with lead ball v. blanks, it is very difficult to believe that if Silva would not have realized it was loaded...And if he did not know he shot the guy, why did he take off when police arrived?

                  The facts seem fairly straightforward. They paint a pretty clear and disturbing picture. However, local law enforcement in Isle of Wight county so botched the investigation from the start that more appropriate charges for the crime could not be filed because they could not be proven in court. Hence, the prosecutor let Silva cop a plea and the judge took it easy on him. Silva took the gun safety class, paid the hospital bill, and walked. Crazy given the facts, but true.
                  Last edited by Craig L Barry; 09-19-2009, 01:10 AM.
                  Craig L Barry
                  Editor, The Watchdog, a non-profit 501[c]3
                  Co-author (with David Burt) Suppliers to the Confederacy
                  Author, The Civil War Musket: A Handbook for Historical Accuracy
                  Member, Company of Military Historians

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                  • #10
                    Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

                    This is rather shocking. I dont see how someone could be so irresponsible, shoot and could have killed someone, and gets to walk more or less with no punishment other than monetary. I think that man should have been kicked out of his unit for being unsafe and avoided like the plague. Just my .02
                    Andrew Gale

                    21st Arkansas Vol. Inf. Co. H
                    Company H, McRae's Arkansas Infantry
                    Affiliated Conscripts Mess

                    Cpl. George Washington Pennington, 171st Penn. Co. K
                    Mustered into service: Aug. 27, 1862
                    Captured: Spottsylvania Court House, Virginia, May 12, 1864
                    Died: Andersonville Prison, Georgia, Sept. 13, 1864
                    sigpic

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                    • #11
                      Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

                      Originally posted by lojafan View Post
                      I think that man should have been kicked out of his unit for being unsafe and avoided like the plague. Just my .02
                      SHOULD?..You mean he hasn't been? He's still running around?
                      [FONT="Georgia"][B][I][U]Ken Pettengale[/U][/I][/B][/FONT]
                      [I]Volunteer Company, UK[/I]


                      "You may not like what you see, but do not on that account fall into the error of trying to adjust it to suit your own vision of what it ought to have been."
                      -- [I][B]George MacDonald Fraser[/B][/I]

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                      • #12
                        Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

                        Mr Pettengale,
                        I could not say if he has or has not been, but as far as I am concerned he is still out there. "Fool me once shame on you, fool me twice shame on me."
                        Andrew Gale

                        21st Arkansas Vol. Inf. Co. H
                        Company H, McRae's Arkansas Infantry
                        Affiliated Conscripts Mess

                        Cpl. George Washington Pennington, 171st Penn. Co. K
                        Mustered into service: Aug. 27, 1862
                        Captured: Spottsylvania Court House, Virginia, May 12, 1864
                        Died: Andersonville Prison, Georgia, Sept. 13, 1864
                        sigpic

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                        • #13
                          Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

                          Firearms safety is each individual's responsibility. Whether there was a weapons inspection or not, the shooter should be held accountable for his actions.
                          If he had pulled a Beretta 92FS in a shopping mall, aimed at someone and pulled the trigger, would he have been able to walk away?
                          I see no difference. There are no firearms "accidents". There is only firearms negligence and carelessness.
                          Tom Dodson
                          Tom Dodson

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                          • #14
                            Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

                            What worries me about kicking him out.. is where he will land. you know some unit out there will pick him up...

                            would be nice if there was a way to keep him or individuals like him out of the hobby... don't know the answer.. but just kicking him out just means he lands somewhere else. and that is a concern to all of us.
                            Catherine L. Kelly
                            Delaware

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                            • #15
                              Re: Charges Against Civil War Reenactor Dismissed

                              Having also myself been on the receiving end of a .44 at an event by a 12 year old with a pistol that was only 12 feet away amazes me about safety. This happened almost 18 years ago and still causes me problems today. It seems that at no time during this event was an inspection ever performed. If this was truly an accident and the "wrong" cylinder was put in, any right thinking re-enactor I think would keep cylinders for the field and live firing separate just because of this possibility. What is really scary is to think that Silva has done this at least once that we all know of, had he done it before or since? I know in my unit if your rifle has ever been live fired at any point it stays at home and doesn't come onto the field.
                              Timothy J. Hubbell P.M.
                              Mt. Vernon Lodge #31
                              Mt. Vernon, IL

                              We must know our past to know our future.

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