Fair to argue he was trying to grab the gun to not get shot by a guy trying to murder him?
Probably not after he said he was going to take the gun and use it on the homeowner.
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Fair to argue he was trying to grab the gun to not get shot by a guy trying to murder him?
Does someone bringing a problem to your door restrict what you are allowed to do? I've never seen or heard of a child custody order that authorized trespass on private property.
I have seen numerous court ordered custody arrangements where the location of exchange is at the home the child is leaving. It eliminates the need to find a halfway point (miles or time?) and eliminates the possibility of one party being late. "At the front door threshold" was a common phrase.
The reason why I have seen these was because when mom and dad are being petty with each other and can't figure out their own nonsense, the judge has to micromanage. Part of the ones I have seen is also including instruction for law enforcement civil stand by notification X minutes ahead by the party who is driving to pick up.
Stand by and keep the peace would have been a good idea with this bunch, but that doesn't mean the other parent can stay there and raise cain after being told to leave. In fact, had an officer been there he would probably have walked the father back to his car and advised him to contact his attorney to seek a remedy after they said the child wasn't there.
I think it goes beyond that.How are you guys coming up with the idea that the shooter is somehow legally entangled /obligated in a child custody dispute that is between a set of parents??
Now, if there was proof or evidence that he was hiding the kid or interfering with parents rights, that’s another matter. But I see no obvious evidence that the shooter has any criminal intent to interfere in a custody dispute (taking place on his property , by the way).
Not fact. The officer would have obeyed the ORDER and arrested those withholding the child. Orders are just that, they aren't optional. None read, "By order of the court, only if the parties feel like it...". Orders are designed to remove discretion and independent thought outside of the order.
That arrest would have been followed up with a search warrant of the premises to locate the missing and endangered child, and escalation in personnel and scope until that child is located.
How are you guys coming up with the idea that the shooter is somehow legally entangled /obligated in a child custody dispute that is between a set of parents??
Now, if there was proof or evidence that he was hiding the kid or interfering with parents rights, that’s another matter.
From my reading, it appears it's his girlfriend's property and not his own property, but he may or may not have set up residence there since separating from his wife (something for the court to decide, if any trespass arguments come into play).But I see no obvious evidence that the shooter has any criminal intent to interfere in a custody dispute (taking place on his property , by the way).
When I said ‘how are you all coming up with....’. I’m not referring to the poster himself. I’m referring/asking the vast majority on here that have replied.He's not, as far as I can tell.
If there was proof of that, he would potentially face child abduction charges. Seems pretty likely that it's all on the mom, though.
From my reading, it appears it's his girlfriend's property and not his own property, but he may or may not have set up residence there since separating from his wife (something for the court to decide, if any trespass arguments come into play).
But again, even if he was involved in illegally interfering with the parent's rights, it wouldn't preclude a self-defense argument since, as discussed above, involvement in a criminal act in and of itself doesn't mean he has no right to self-defense (though again, I personally see no good case for self-defense).
A person can act as an agent of an owner of designated as such.When I said ‘how are you all coming up with....’. I’m not referring to the poster himself. I’m referring/asking the vast majority on here that have replied.
If this was the ex wife’s place of residence, that would change my position entirely. The shooter has no right to order any one to do anything if it’s not his home.
Not fact. The officer would have obeyed the ORDER and arrested those withholding the child. Orders are just that, they aren't optional. None read, "By order of the court, only if the parties feel like it...". Orders are designed to remove discretion and independent thought outside of the order.
That arrest would have been followed up with a search warrant of the premises to locate the missing and endangered child, and escalation in personnel and scope until that child is located.
Child support orders are civil here; I don't know about Texas. Even still, the order would have applied to the mother, not the boyfriend.
It's a moot point anyway since there were no officers there at the time.
The deceased was there to retrieve his child. If the mother lives there as does the child at least part time, it would be reasonable to assume the deceased has a legal reason to be on the property.It seems most of you are getting all emotional thinking on this one. Maybe cause kids are involved. If this episode took place at the shooters home (not the ex wive’s home), and the deceased fella came to this shooters home, it doesn’t matter WHY/WHAT reason he was there for. He has (as I see it), trespassed, been told to leave, threatened the owner of property, attacked owner of property, and property owner can rightfully claim fear of life.
Castle doctrine/self defense can be legally argued (and won).
It also seems that many here are willing to overlook all the dumb things the deceased did to get to the point it did. As he had married this nitwit ex. He came to someone’s home who (legally) had no relationship to a custody arrangement. He made a scene there rather than calling for appropriate help. He foolishly spoke boldly to an armed man on HIS property. Then, to top it off, attempted to assault the armed man on HIS property AFTER being warned to leave. Someone on another thread said.... “play stupid games, win stupid prizes.”
Now, pending still many unknown and some known other circumstances, this at best in court could only result in a hung jury. (IMHO).
Many of the circumstances brought up on this episode of events have little factual bearing on the final pertinent result of home owner pulling the trigger.
In Texas disobeying a court ordered custody agreement is up to a felony.Correct, civil. It seems a stretch LEO is going to start arresting and asking for warrants in these situations. It's been awhile since I was active in the divorce community but I have never heard of it, in fact, just the opposite.
In Texas disobeying a court ordered custody agreement is up to a felony.
What? Are you LEO and have done this? This is not what I'm familiar with at all?