Attempted to get help after car crash, shot in back of head with shotgun.
11/7/2013 12:05:16 PM
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20131105/METRO01/311050098/1409/METRO/Family-slain-Detroit-woman-seeks-answers-about-incidentWhile I'm sure there's more to it than this, I don't understand how someone knocking on your door at night leads to you shooting her. In Stand Your Ground cases, do you have to announce your intent to shoot or anything like that? My understanding was that it's supposed to be clear and present danger, not someone on your property
11/7/2013 12:09:05 PM
^bc Dearborn is a sundown town, and she wasn't white
11/7/2013 12:33:20 PM
and now that she's dead, he can make up any story he wants
11/7/2013 12:35:18 PM
There is no duty to announce.There is also no right to shoot someone knocking on your door.Reasonable fear of imminent death or serious injury.Where people fail to read into the law is "reasonable fear". It's not just that someone says, "I thought that person was going to kill me". It's more complex than that.
11/7/2013 12:46:15 PM
Holy crap
11/7/2013 12:58:46 PM
11/7/2013 12:59:13 PM
11/7/2013 4:46:22 PM
Today, he was convicted of second degree murder, and was sentenced to 15-30 years in prison.I guess it is a little confusing to me how he claimed it was both and accident and self defense. Oh well.
9/3/2014 10:43:56 AM
I would guess he is basically claiming the reason he had the gun at the door was self defense, but it was an accident that the gun actually went off.
9/3/2014 10:53:09 AM
Yeah, I understand that. It is just that typically when I think of self defense as a legal defense, it is in reference to the act of shooting....not pulling a gun out.
9/3/2014 10:58:39 AM
sounds like justice was served. or was this a make-up call for the trayvon martin case???
9/3/2014 11:04:36 AM
Definitely justice.With great power comes great responsibility...Random gun question, but do shotguns just accidentally "go off" like that? I can see myself getting a shotgun when I move into my new house, but that seems pretty concerning...
9/3/2014 11:29:18 AM
To me, the most compelling piece of evidence is that it is the back of the head.It makes no sense, and it speaks for itself. If she was departing his porch, let her depart, and freakin' close and lock your door and move on in life. Human life is valuable, and as the jury has spoken, it was a murder.
9/3/2014 11:30:53 AM
9/3/2014 11:40:31 AM
I had never heard of this case and googled a few articles. Interestingly, I read several before coming across this bit of info about the case:
9/3/2014 12:12:48 PM
yeah, this is a tough situation especially these days.everyone's worst fear is hearing a loud noise in the middle of the night, so your body goes into full alert/defensive mode. all i know is that it would suck to lay there dying, and in your last moments having wished you'd fired first instead of worrying about whether you'd be prosecuted or not, especially if you opened up the door and saw this:
9/3/2014 12:26:45 PM
It doesn't really matter what you would or wouldn't do; what matters is the law says you can't kill people that aren't a direct threat to you. While it's understandable that he might have panicked, it doesn't excuse his shooting and killing someone he never had contact with.[Edited on September 3, 2014 at 12:30 PM. Reason : v exactly]
9/3/2014 12:27:44 PM
^^i'm pretty sure you wouldn't be prosecuted if you shot that guy in the pic on your porch.And in most situations where someone is banging on your door in 4 in the morning, it's probably best to not open the door and just call the cops.
9/3/2014 12:29:30 PM
9/3/2014 12:33:37 PM
9/3/2014 12:39:35 PM
The law seems to be designed, rightly, to discourage people from being panicky, paranoid, and impulsive.Just because this man's instinct was abject fear, and wanting to kill someone doesn't mean he should legally be allowed to act on this impulse. We all have different proclivities to certain behavior, but this doesn't mean as a society we should accept peoples' impulses, especially when they may lead to an innocent person being skilled.
9/3/2014 12:54:19 PM
Agree completely
9/3/2014 12:57:26 PM
9/3/2014 1:02:47 PM
If she was driving with a .21 BAC running in to parked cars she could have just as easily killed a totally innocent person (or more than one really), and would have gotten less time for it! I am not saying she deserved what happened to her, but no one knows what the guy was thinking when his house was being pounded on at 4am.]
9/3/2014 1:12:29 PM
^BUt that's the point... it's irrelevant what he was thinking. Nothing he could have thought puts his behavior within the bounds of the law, considering the alleged actions of the woman.
9/3/2014 1:19:08 PM
9/3/2014 1:27:43 PM
I'm not sure what the confusion is. Is this a new concept to you? A person doesn't have to be armed in order to use lethal force against them if they are threatening death, serious injury, or sexual assault.
9/3/2014 1:29:01 PM
I feel like it was just worded very weird.maybe this would have been clearer:
9/3/2014 3:43:35 PM
but it also doesn't matter if the perp has arms or not.
9/3/2014 3:45:27 PM
Something I've been wondering about the whole lethal force and fleeing thing. If someone breaks into your house, sexually assaults or murders your family member (significant other, child, whatever) and flees, but you don't catch them until they are fleeing, would you be charged with murder if you shot them? And how much of a difference would it make whether they are on vs. off your property?[Edited on September 3, 2014 at 7:08 PM. Reason : ]
9/3/2014 7:07:27 PM
Yes, you could be charged with murder. The use of lethal force is to stop the imminent threat. Once the threat has subsided, there is no justification for the use of lethal force. Of course, this is always up to the DA to charge you and up to a jury of your peers to find you guilty.On your property or not generally doesn't matter for this particular situation.
9/3/2014 7:15:35 PM
fleeing makes me think you would be shooting them in the back, which is almost never allowedonly if they were on top of a family member assaulting them i imagine
9/3/2014 7:30:14 PM
I don't know of any (enforced) "shooting in the back" law. It's all about the imminent threat or lack there of. Often time, a shot in the back is potential evidence of fleeing, but not always.*[Edited on September 3, 2014 at 7:40 PM. Reason : *I say (enforced) because some state may have an old law related to being a gentleman in a duel.]
9/3/2014 7:39:17 PM
9/3/2014 7:56:59 PM
there was a thread a while back about a girl who had escaped some kind of attacker/rapist/whatever and was naked and beating on somebody's door hysterically. i don't recall the outcome, but i remember i said i would not open the door and folks called me a heartless asshole.
9/3/2014 8:01:58 PM
Yep, I remember that.You know, I don't know what I'd do. I guess I'd make that call at the time. I'd definitely go to the door with my AR.Now, that's interesting that the collective opinion then was that you're wrong if you don't answer the door, and now it's "you're a dumbass if you do." Is that due to race consciously or not? Is that due to the first one being a true victim, and the second one being mostly a dumbass who caused her own trouble? Is it colored by the fact that the second one ended poorly?
9/3/2014 8:10:18 PM
either way, i'm calling the law and keeping the door shut
9/3/2014 8:20:36 PM
If someone were knocking on my door at 4:30 in the morning, I'd get a gun ready, call the cops, and wait inside. I really don't want my daughter growing up with her father in the state pen. And this guy? 15 to 30 years doesn't seem like justice to me, because once he ticks over to 15, he's out. He'll probably get out early for good behavior.And when I say inside, I mean somewhere other than around the door. [Edited on September 3, 2014 at 8:33 PM. Reason : asdfas]
9/3/2014 8:26:10 PM
lucky for me, I live on the third floor of my house and can't hear SHIT up here, so if someone (drunkard OR rapist) needs my attention, they're just going to have to break in and make their way to my room
9/3/2014 8:49:55 PM
9/3/2014 8:59:14 PM
^read this: http://how-i-did-it.org/drywall/index.html
9/3/2014 9:03:27 PM
supposedly #4 buck is the best home defense shotgun loadeach pellet is about .22there are typically 27 - 34 of themover-penetration is minimized but still retains knockdown powerthe FBI did some study years ago and it was their preferred load[Edited on September 3, 2014 at 9:18 PM. Reason : -]
9/3/2014 9:16:33 PM
9/3/2014 9:22:08 PM
look, if youre about to get raped, shoot them
9/3/2014 9:26:06 PM
Damn, slappy1 is nearly blind without her contacts?I'm hatching a plot to go swimming with her, make sure her contact gets washed out under water, and then....Hit on that ho with a Mask on.
9/3/2014 9:38:05 PM
9/4/2014 8:56:20 AM
so they just have to cross the threshold of the door, or in this case, my 3rd floor bedroom stairs. what if I can't see their face to know if it's a rape-face or a lets-get-tacos face? do I still shoot? what if I *feel* like they're going to rape me, and they're coming at me, but they have in their backpack a bunch of tacos and had legitimately planned to surprise me with a fourth meal in bed? obviously, that was an error in judgement on their part because who breaks into a stranger's house at 4am to deliver them tacos...but still. uugh. hard call
9/4/2014 3:16:05 PM
I feel as though you are just trolling.And this is getting into the details of state law. In some states, such an intruder in such a situation can be assumed to be posing said threat. In other states, this assumption can't be made. In those states, a simple case of trespassing does not warrant said threat and thus there is no justification for lethal force.
9/4/2014 3:19:28 PM
9/4/2014 3:38:29 PM