>come home from work >husband is cheating on you >you punch him in the face because he's fucking some other woman >your name, face and job are now all over the internet
1. Your country 2. Do they violate your privacy like this in your country?
jannies are probably going to delete this but I'm genuinely curious about journalistic practices in other countries. I remember they didn't release the name of that New Zealander who murdered that English girl because of his privacy or whatever
Carter Jackson
Florida does this. Other states have laws to prevent this, but Florida basically just shows all police reports to the press.
This is also why Florida Man is a thing.
Jose Reed
>flight attendant As if she's not getting plowed on the reg by randoms.
Aiden Johnson
Why her husband cheats on her? I'd never do this, fucking americans
Ian Thomas
only in florida lol
Logan Bennett
>anything happens >Fukken Amurikkka It happens everywhere, but remain ignorant.
Jose Turner
Don't care, if the genders were flipped the attacker would be regarded as a monster.
Connor Collins
>NOOO DONT SHOW HIS FACE HE MIGHT GETTING FAMOUS AND MARRY A BILLIONAIRE
Nope. Fats are out of the question one way or the other.
Easton Lee
She didn't kill him, she didn't even maim him, it sounds like she got one good shot to his eye after catching him cheating. Later on in the same article it names her exact place of work. I don't know why her employer is relevant enough to be listed in a news article or how that's even allowed
because this is generally public information. anyone is allowed to go to courtroom and hear all of this anyway, so I don't know what kind of privacy you're expecting.
Kevin Ramirez
She's a flight attendant. 100% chance she's cheated on him too
I think I'm particularly butthurt because NZ won't release the names of murderers and Korea blurs the faces of sex traffickers, it doesn't seem fair reeee