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blessedinnyc -> RE: 'Castle doctrine' likely will apply in fatal shooting (5/7/2008 5:12:43 PM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: blessedinnyc Shooting someone in your house in self-defense makes perfect sense. But the story seems to suggest that the guy was running away when the homeowner delivered the fatal shot. Generally, the law makes it difficult to use self-defense as an argument when an intruder is outside and running away, so I don't know how healthy it's going to be to link this case to gun rights. If you own a gun, you need to understand the legal use of your weapon. If this guy used his weapon illegally to shoot someone in a way that wasn't self-defense or defense of others, he's just as much a criminal- perhaps moreso- than the guy who broke into his house. I don't know all of the facts, yet, so maybe we should wait for them to come out. If the homeowner ran outside and the burglar followed him, that's one thing. If the burglar was running away (as I first suspected, but I haven't seen enough info to make a judgement yet), that's quite another. If you shoot someone while he's running away in New York or most Midwestern states with the intention of killing him and he dies, you're going to be charged with manslaughter. I don't think this is unfair or unreasonable. Apparently, I am shocked to discover that you can shoot and kill anyone who is unwelcome on your property in Texas, in general. I retract my statement about knowing when you can lawfully discharge a weapon, because apparently, this weapon was discharged lawfully. Apparently, Texas's laws on guns are much different than those I ran into in IL. I disagree with them, but Texans get to make their own laws. I will just be careful not to set foot onto anyone's private property unless I'm 100% certain they're mentally stable and aren't going to stab me in the back.
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