amassi
WKR
- Joined
- May 26, 2018
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And not a single person out of six checks in him.The thing that i find amazing is that the guy is laying there shot and they are still arguing.
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And not a single person out of six checks in him.The thing that i find amazing is that the guy is laying there shot and they are still arguing.
chlinstructor said:Texas Law allows you to threaten someone with Deadly Force ONLY if the use of Deadly Force would have been Justified According to Texas Penal Code.
The Shooter had no justification for threatening Deadly Force. Not for Trespassing and Not for a Verbal Argument. That’s not Legal Justification.
He became the Aggressor when he went in his house and brought a gun back out to a Verbal Argument. He had no Justification to Threaten Deadly Force. He fuqked up. Period.
Why would you re-think support for "castle"? The little guy did not seek out confrontation. Someone brought it to him. He did not handle it well, but he was not the aggressor. He felt threatened, and probably was in real danger by the time the gun is introduced. The purpose of castle in my opinion is to make clear that there is no excuse for aggressively entering someone's property, and if you do you can face deadly force. That is what happened to big guy. He entered the property, was aggressive, and did not leave when told to. He shouldn't have been shot over it, but he also should have understood that he could be shot over it. It is not the fault of the law. It is the fault of the guy who went uninvited to another man's house, physically assaulted his girlfriend and the other man, and refused to leave after being told to, even when a gun (initially not used) was brought into play. If you get shot in that situation (unless its in the back while walking away) you have put yourself into the situation. The burden is not on the homeowner to prove that he was afraid, the burden is on the moron to not trespass and threaten someone after being told to leave.Adding to this: I’m no expert in this area, but I thought the castle doctrine applied to inside your house, clarifying that you had no duty to retreat before using deadly force in self defense within your house. It doesn’t mean you can just shoot anyone in your house, much less outside your house.
I always thought stand you ground was, similarly, that you didn’t have a duty to retreat from an attacker before using force in self defense. But the standard for self defense is still the same: you have to have a reasonable fear of life or serious injury.
I thought the castle doctrine and stand your ground was a response to case law saying even if your life was threatened, you had to try and retreat before using deadly force. To me, that is crazy and stand your ground makes sense.
But if this incident is a castle doctrine or stand your ground case, I suppose I’ve misunderstood and would even rethink my support for those doctrines. As pro-gun as I am, you shouldn’t legally protect folks who inject a gun into a non-life-threatening situation and inflame a heated-but-non-violent custody dispute into a shooting incident.
Speaking of Rittenhouse, wasn't he found not guilty because folks chased him? In other words, they brought the fight to him and were the aggressors.Have we already forgotten what the media tried to do to Kyle Rittenhouse?