I've just realised you meant the common law doctrine that holds participants in a criminal enterprise liable for all reasonable outcomes of that enterprise. (Thanks to AI for thisdefinition!).
But was it a criminal enterprise? I'm sure the Greek lawyers between them will make a tidy sum thrashing that out..
It is a charter yacht (length 176'6 / 53.8m) registered in Malta with a crew of up to 11 (or 13) and can carry up to 12 passengers (in 6 suites) so it seems to have been a combo of crew and passengers arrested. It rents for €249,000/week plus expenses during the summer months.
A key question might be is who allowed/provided the fireworks? If it was charter company and yacht captain, they probably have most of the blame. If it was the passengers or some of them with the captain's permission, it is shared. If it was the passengers without the captain's permission or knowledge, then the passengers.
I also note that Greek law is unlikely to be like English/American law.
Comments
Hanlon's razor is an adage or rule of thumb that states: Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
I've just realised you meant the common law doctrine that holds participants in a criminal enterprise liable for all reasonable outcomes of that enterprise. (Thanks to AI for thisdefinition!).
But was it a criminal enterprise? I'm sure the Greek lawyers between them will make a tidy sum thrashing that out..
A key question might be is who allowed/provided the fireworks? If it was charter company and yacht captain, they probably have most of the blame. If it was the passengers or some of them with the captain's permission, it is shared. If it was the passengers without the captain's permission or knowledge, then the passengers.
I also note that Greek law is unlikely to be like English/American law.