Being one of the living dead would be a big advantage if you're charged with murder.
And you could probably trash your neighbor's property and not be successfully sued.
Ryan Davidson, a lawyer who also blogs about "superheroes, supervillains, and the law" at , tells that "if zombies are effectively unconscious, then they would be incapable of performing voluntary actions and thus immune to criminal liability (or civil liability, for that matter)."
He'll be discussing that conclusion and "various legal aspects of being a zombie" on Friday convention in Anaheim, Calif.
Now, on the flip side, zombies likely wouldn't have any legal rights, Davidson says. So they couldn't sue the living folks who've taken over their property.
Of course, this being the law, there is another way of looking at it.
If zombies aren't re-animated corpses, but are instead "living people infected with some kind of virus," Davidson says, then maybe they could be criminally and civilly liable for their actions.
But that may be a moot point. From what we've seen , it doesn't look like the living are all that concerned about zombies' rights anyway.
We've developed something of a zombie news beat here on The Two-Way, by the way:
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And Monkey See has been on the zombie beat, too:
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