Quote Originally Posted by fetishdj View Post
Elective surgery (cosmetic or otherwise)

BDSM is not covered by any such overarching body. Dom/mes (professional or otherwise) are not registered with any central body and while we do tend to follow a set of universal guidelines (SSC or RACK, depends which you prefer) these are not considered legally binding - they are merely a set of guidelines that all in the lifestyle tend to follow. Therefore, any contract or consent form between two BDSM lifestylers claiming that one gives the other permission to harm them in any way is unlikely to be supported by a judge in a court of law. Therefore, if a sub and a Dom fall out and the sub decides to sue the Dom for GBH and the Dom presents the contract/consent form the judge does not have to accept it as evidence that the sub did consent. Similarly, if the police find evidence of GBH and press criminal charges (which I think they can do in cases of GBH or murder/manslaughter without the involvement of the wronged party) then again the contract is not acceptable as evidence.

Of course, a judge can happily accept it if they so choose but they are not legally obliged to (as they would be for a medical consent form) and if they did this may create a precedent which could affect future cases of this type (which may mean that they are unwilling to accept it in order to avoid this precedent).

Now the above does mainly apply to serious cases and only those cases where there is a cause for the law to get involved - manslaughter, serious injury etc. 'Rough stuff' is probably ok to consent to, just be aware that a court will not take any 'slave contracts' seriously and they will not protect from prosecution if a sub who has consented changes their mind and you 'insist', the sub accidentaly gets more seriously injured than you intended or (worst case scenario, and these do happen...) the sub dies due to something which could be due to the BDSM activity.
Not sure about other jurisdictions - but I have a feeling the response might be the same as here...

BDSM activity would still fall foul of the zero tolerance attitudes to domestic violence and result in a likely successful prosecution for assault and battery by the dom and (even worse perhaps) successful prosecution against the sub for aiding and abetting domestic violence (even though the sub would also class as the victim of domestic violence).

In other words - if the police or legal system get involved in any way as a result of BDSM activity it could turn nasty for the lifestylers.

The above was a bit off topic - the original post was excellent advice to all