Originally posted by: exdeath
Originally posted by: sirjonk
Why killing over property is dangerous.
http://www.khou.com/news/local...eofforce.49ded3f4.html
Take Jerry Casey.
One night 13 years ago, he thought a thief was trying to steal his pickup from in front of his home in north Houston.
He got his rifle and fired, killing the man who was in a wrecker and turned out to be a repo man just doing his job.
A grand jury though did not indict Casey, but eight months later, he nonetheless killed himself, citing the repo tragedy in a suicide note.
...
Nixon is a lawyer. He?s also a card-carrying concealed handgun owner and has a company that provides licensed gun owners legal help for $10 a month.
?And if God forbid, you ever have to go to trial, we defend you at trial,? Nixon said.
You can get free advice on his Web site:
Like, ?Do not tell the 911 dispatcher? any details about the shooting because it?s ?being recorded? and will be used ?against you.?
And instructor Smith said, ?If someone breaks into your house, you don?t go hunting for them ? defend yourself if necessary, but hide or run.?
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Oops. He may still walk, prosecutors are still investigating last I read, but I think maybe he shouldn't have said to the 911 dispatcher "I'm gonna kill them."
The problem there is a private entity took the law into it's own hands by deciding to trespass on private property, vandalize and break into the vehicle, and steal it.
The company or individual who sent the man to do his job should have been charged with involuntary manslaughter, breaking and entering, etc.
If they had a legitimate case and the vehicles was indeed theirs due to default on a loan, all they had to do was knock on the door during normal DAYLIGHT business hours and announce themselves and request that they be given the keys. If denied, show up with law enforcement escort and a court order.
Stopping someone in the act on your private property is acceptable. Chasing them on public property in pursuit of your stolen objects is also acceptable. Chasing them into someone else's private property (ie: they take your stuff, run down the street, and enter *their* home) is where the chase stops and law enforce must be brought in.
I draw the line of "taking the law into your own hands" when the pursuit of a thief is no longer on your property or public property, but when you continue chase into private property that is not yours, as you are now trespassing in order to get your property back. Such as the repo man did.
Crappy situation for all, but hardly the norm. As I hinted before, cases of "it was a friend" or "just the repo man" and other similar cases of mistaken identity in a shooting are glorified and made examples by the media to fit their liberal agenda. However cases of justified defense against crime with a firearm outnumber these stories 10000:1 yet passed over or given a token sentence or two in an obscure page in the paper, often not even making the news at all. People love tragedy and controversial issues, so only accidents like that are going to get the news spotlight and be used as fuel for the anti gun agenda.
When was the last time you saw a positive story about guns in the news that encouraged law abiding citizens to consider a gun and training as a viable means of defense, instead of the tired old "use your key chain or cell phone as a blunt object" garbage?