From News Nation:
“Proposed
bill would put South Carolina porch pirates in jail for up to 15 years”
A proposed bill
in South Carolina could have porch pirates spending 15 years in prison for the
crime. “The name porch pirates makes it seem cute, but it’s not a cute issue,”
Rep. Cezar McKnight said. McKnight is turning this issue into a criminal law by
proposing a bill that would make it a felony to take a package off the porch or
from around the perimeter of someone’s house, punishable by up to 15 years in
jail. “Some jurisdictions have been treating it as petty larceny, making it a
slap on the wrist..” McKnight said no more. “A person’s home is their castle
and I don’t like the idea of it being violated, whether that being coming into
the inside or going onto the porch. A person’s house is sacrosanct, and it
should be treated as such.” But the proposal is receiving some pushback from
inside of his party and across the aisle. “One of the things that I’ve heard
is, ‘Oh it’s usually people on drugs,’ and my response to that is you have no
information anecdotally or statistically to back that up,” McKnight said. “He
gave the scenario in the committee meeting of, ‘What I left a package out for
days that my wife told me to put up and a homeless guy came and got it?’ It
doesn’t matter. The homeless guy doesn’t have a right to come in your yard and
go on your porch regardless of if you just put the item out there or it’s been
there five years. It’s your home.” McKnight said his colleagues offered a
suggestion that folks can send their items to a hub. But he said people
shouldn’t have to do that or pay an anti-theft tax for their packages. “Folks
don’t need to have the extra stress of worrying about, ‘Oh, is the package that
I ordered going to be at home when I get off from work?’”
Lawmakers in
his party weren’t supportive of McKnight’s idea that the porch pirates would
need to be sentenced to a mandatory minimum of five years in prison. After
working with them, he dropped the minimum to a judge’s discretion of no years
in prison to 15 years. Trent Faris with the York County Sheriff’s Office says
deputies receive only a few formal complaints of packages stolen throughout the
year. “Especially in the neighborhoods where the houses are really close
together. In the last years, we’ve had around about maybe 11 to 15,” Faris
said. He said doorbell video helps them try to get some clues to who the person
is, but it’s not often that there’s an arrest. “Its difficult, but its not
unheard of.” McKnight feels like it should still be a criminal law in place
either way. “This is the second time that I’ve put this bill forward and I’m
gonna keep putting it forward. My interest is protecting the people of South
Carolina,” he said. McKnight said he feels like if something isn’t done now,
the issue will only get worse.
^ I believe
there needs to be tougher on porch pirates, but don’t think going to jail for
up to 15 years is right. Maybe up to 5 years in jail, but not 15 years. You know
this bill was created because the lawmaker had it happen to him (it’s the main
reason most bills like this get introduced.) ^
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