Italy's Supreme Court of Cessation, the highest court in
the land has ruled that theft of small amounts of food out of hunger is
not a crime. The landmark ruling was given in the case of a homeless man named Roman
Ostriakov, who in 2011 was caught stealing a sausage and some cheese
from a Genoa supermarket.
Ostriakov had hidden the goods, worth about $4.50, under
his jacket as he paid for breadsticks. He was arrested after a customer
informed the store’s security of the theft; and in 2013, he was
convicted and sentenced to six months in jail.
The highest court in the land has however overturned his
conviction on the grounds that stealing small amounts of food to stave
off hunger is not a crime.
The court said: “The condition of the defendant, and the
circumstances in which the seizure of merchandise took place, prove that
he took possession of that small amount of food in the face of an
immediate and essential need for nourishment, acting therefore in a
state of necessity,”
“The supreme court has established a sacrosanct principle: a small theft because of hunger is in no way comparable to an act of delinquency, because the need to feed justifies the fact."
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