Not sure do you think it was?do you think that was staged?
Not sure do you think it was?do you think that was staged?

it is a common lawWhat do you mean hence 'self defence wrong law'? Self defence is not a law, nor have I mentioned it. Please explain?
is statuteThe Criminal Law Act 1967
What is a common law? Make some sense.it is a common law

why would someone be filming?Not sure do you think it was?

law established through decided cases and custom, rather than specified in statute. The statute in question specifically states the common law rights are replaced. That is because at the time, common law had not established the right to strike first in self defence, making it difficult to use force to stop a crime.What is a common law? Make some sense.
And? It is just a meaningless statementit is a common law
whereas:
is statute
True, people fim all sorts of crap these days.why would someone be filming?

for likes, clicks and follows.. instagram is full of similarly staged "hero moments".True, people fim all sorts of crap these days.
Waffling again. Reasonable force rules are defined and applied across the board, common law statute or otherwise...law established through decided cases and custom, rather than specified in statute. The statute in question specifically states the common law rights are replaced. That is because at the time, common law had not established the right to strike first in self defence, making it difficult to use force to stop a crime.
Not entirely, the credibility of the account given by the accused carries a fair degree of weight.
The injuries received and any other recorded or witnessed or physical evidence is also taken into account.
An accused can't simply say, "he came at me first".

Only way to deal with these savages, they only understand violence, no point trying to reason with them.OMG, poor pickpocket

Are you suggesting the same rules for reasonable force are applied? yes or no. This seems to have been your argument thus far.Waffling again. Reasonable force rules are defined and applied across the board, common law statute or otherwise...
Reasonable force' guidance has been tested against and applies to:
Criminal Law Act 1967 (Section 3)*
Common Law
Children Act 1989 & 2004
Education and Inspections Act 2006 (Section 93)
Use of Reasonable Force in Schools – DfE Guidance
Mental Capacity Act 2005 (Sections 5–6)
Human Rights Act 1998
Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974
Equality Act 2010
It remains a fact that your rights to stop a crime/criminal are defined in sec 3 as I have been saying all along, rather than the common law right to use reasonable force to defend yourself, which is the "wrong law."YOU quoted the CLA 1967. Have you changed your mind on that now?

And they would use other evidence and actions leading up to the incident, such as retrieving the stolen property then letting the thief go, or the potential thief legging it without the stolen property, and the CCTV evidence to assess the credibility of the accused's version.Of course. That goes without saying.
A jury in a criminal trial would have to decide whether the 'honest belief' was genuinely held.
But once the jury has established that the 'honest belief' is genuinely held, they use that as the basis for determining whether the force was reasonable. Even if the defendant was mistaken in his honest belief
And they would use other evidence and actions leading up to the incident, such as retrieving the stolen property then letting the thief go, or the potential thief legging it without the stolen property, and the CCTV evidence to assess the credibility of the accused's version.

I’m assuming the cctv is not public or have people seen it?I am only trying to explain the legal principles involved.
I haven't really tried to apply them to this particular case.