Aggravated battery

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Aggravated battery is a legal term for an act of battery, when it "is committed with intent to do serious harm or murder, or when it is done with a dangerous weapon, it is described as aggravated. A weapon is considered dangerous whenever the purpose for using it is to cause death or serious harm. State statutes define aggravated battery in various ways—such as assault with intent to kill. Under such statutes, assault means both battery and assault. It is punishable as a felony in all states."[1]

Samantha-Rae Tuthil (2023) commented:

"Aggravated battery This is a much more serious charge. Like a simple battery, the prosecution must prove that you intended to make contact with the victim, that the victim did not consent, and that the victim suffered some kind of harm. In addition, they will usually need to prove that you intended to cause harm. An even more serious degree of aggravated battery will require great bodily harm. Permanent disfigurement, serious bodily injury, permanent disability, or possible risk of death are some of the ways an injury is considered great bodily harm. Sometimes, if you use a dangerous weapon or a deadly weapon like a gun or a knife in the battery, it will automatically count as aggravated, even without grave bodily harm. If the circumstances are severe enough, you could face an attempted murder charge or a sentencing enhancement."[2]

Circumcision?

Does the medically-not-indicated, non-therapeutic amputation of a healthy foreskin from the penis of a minor boy without his consent constitute aggravated battery?

Circumcision is the Biblical euphemism used by the circumcision industry to promote the irreversible surgical excision and amputation of the foreskin (AKA prepuce) of the penis of a human male. The amputation causes genital mutilation, permanent disfigurement, and permanent loss of function, which causes an increase in medical issues, degrades normal physiological sexual function, and causes psychological issues.

Since boys are too young to grant consent, the American circumcision industry has traditionally relied on surrogate consent, granted by a parental surrogate, for circumcision not the actual child victim, however the Supreme Court of the United States of America (1944) ruled:

Parents may be free to become martyrs themselves. But it does not follow they are free, in identical circumstances, to make martyrs of their children before they have reached the age of full and legal discretion when they can make that choice for themselves.[3]

Parental surrogates are denied the right to make that choice for their children. Surrogate consent cannot be used to legalize or excuse the aggravated battery of foreskin amputation.

European precedents

See also

Conclusion

Circumcision of male children is a mutilation of genital tissue that permanently destroys the foreskin (prepuce) of a male child. It also irreversibly destroys the protective, immunological, sensory, and sexual functions of the foreskin, leaving the male patient at increased risk of disease.[4] It is mutilating and causes permanent disfigurement of the penis. Circumcision of male children clearly meets all tests for aggravated battery. It cannot be legalized or excused by patient or surrogate consent because no one has the legal capacity to grant consent for the aggravated battery of non-therapeutic child circumcision.[5]

References

  1. REFweb Anonymous. Battery, The Free Dictionary by Farlex. Retrieved 11 July 2026.
  2. REFweb Tuthil, Samantha-Rae (21 December 2023). Aggravated Battery, https://www.lawinfo.com, LawInfo. Retrieved 11 July 2026.
  3. Prince v Massachusetts, 21 U.S. 158, 159-60 (1944)
  4. REFjournal Fendereski K, Horns JJ, Driggs N, Lau G, Shaeffer AJ. Comparing Penile Problems in Circumcised vs. Uncircumcised Boys: Insights From a Large Commercial Claims Database With a Focus on Provider Type Performing Circumcision. J Pediatr Surg. November 2024; 59(11): [161614]. PMID. PMC. DOI. Retrieved 3 January 2025.
  5. REFjournal Hill G. Can anyone authorize the nontherapeutic permanent alteration of a child's body?. The American Journal of Bioethics. 2003 (Spring); 3(2): 16-8. PMID. DOI. Retrieved 11 July 2026.