Is it against the law to defecate on a person?

  • Thread starter Thread starter upawallndownagain
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upawallndownagain

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I need to know if I can press charges, at school today a kid pissed on my sons shoe. He got suspended for three days because he followed the kid back to class asked him why he did it when the teacher told him to sit down he shoved the kid, the kid shoved back in "defense" and my son shoved him again into a desk. But now people are telling me that it's against the law to put your bodily fluid on a person and I need to press charges. So if anyone knows any laws please help me.
Sorry urinate I'm still pissed at the whole thing, I guess there are stalls around all the urinals so he wasn't standing side by side with him. My son is 15 and not a wuss, if you want to talk crap go somewhere else and do it I just wanted serious answers. Thanks
 
what a diirty little ffuuckkinng shiittt head!!


btw i dont know sorry.

suie there arsseess
 
First off, your son was urinated on, not deficated on. Urinating on someone could be considered a form of assault, but your son also physically pushed the other kid, this is also an assault.

Both children were wrong, both need to be punished, but it doesnt warrant police involement, unless you actually want to waste your tax dollars and their time to actually charge both boys in criminal court for the behavior.

It will cost you more in the end to pay fines, than it does to actually be a parent to the kids.
 
As gross as it sounds I don't think there is a law against it. I mean, I hear of all kinds of weird people that actually like that stuff. So if it is against the law it must be if you don't consent to it or something. *why anyone would is beyond me* I would ask my local DA. However I have to question the mentality of your son for LETTING it happen.

btw taking a wee is called urinate
 
Defecating on a person would consist of having a bowel movement on them. You are talking about urinating on a person.

I'm sure that this constitutes some kind of abuse/harrassment, and there should be some sort of action taken against the individual.

I think that different jurisdictions would have different laws/statutes about this, and you would probably have to consult a lawyer, and since the individual is underage? That is a whole different situation.

You might enlist the school's help in dealing with this.
 
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