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Terrible analogy. All you're talking about here is an enforcing body being unaware that an offense was committed. If you punched a bloke in front of the cops, the law would demand that you're charged with a assault, whether the bloke laughs or drops dead. Why? Because to punch someone is against the law. If a guy backflips off a wall however, and inadvertently hits his head against your fist, you won't be charged, whether he laughs, is injured or even dies.
And this is the point. First you must be found guilty of having done something wrong; then, and only then, does the outcome weigh on the penalty. The determination of having committed an offense is never determined by the result; only the level of offense which you've committed.
But none of this changes the fact that the charge will be a result of the consequences.
You punch a guy and he dies - Manslaughter
You punch a guy and he is uninjured - Assault
It seems to be the same in the AFL now. You bump a guy and ur heads clash, both players get up, nothing to answer. You bump a guy, head clash, he goes off with concussion rule, youre up for rough conduct.




