Swamp Rat said:I think where my family and my life is concerned, the farthest I'll go back is 1911. :v
paulvallandigham said:Sorry, but the rest of my response did not get printed.
continuing on with those tenets:
a. The Bad guy must demonstrate he( they) has the ABILITY to cause Great Bodily Harm( GBH) or Death to you or another innocent party. This can be disparity in size, sex, age, strength, numbers, etc. AND proximity to use such force.
b. The Bad guy must demonstrate he(they) has
The CAPACITY to do you( or another innocent person) GBH or death: This may be possession of a firearm, which the Law Presumes( legal presumptions are very rare, but this is one of them) is deadly regardless of distance( range). It can be a knife or blunt object such as a club, or hammer, or your Ming Vase, PROVIDED that the bad guy is within reasonable striking distance. Self Defense experts have proven that a person within 7 yards( 21 feet) of you can attack and hurt you with a knife, pen, pencil, spike, ice pick, blunt object, etc. within 1.5 seconds, about the same length of time it takes the average officer to react and draw and fire his holstered handgun on controlled range conditions. When such an attack is unexpected, the time to react, draw and fire is much longer, and you will be hurt unless you take other steps to avoid the attack. There are very few rooms in a house that will give you as much as 21 feet distance between you and an intruder. I refer to the 21 foot circle around a person as his " ZONE OF DANGER", BECAUSE ANYONE WITHIN THAT PERIMETER CAN ATTACK AND HARM YOU- EVEN KILL YOU- BEFORE YOU CAN EMPLOY A FIREARM IN SELF DEFENSE.
c. The Bad guys must indicate by his words or actions that he INTENDS to do you "GBH or death. If he has a gun in his back pocket while he is taking your TV and computer out the door, it really doesn't matter much what he might be saying. He simply does not have the ability, given the fact he has his hands full and his back to you, to employ deadly force against you. But, on the other hand, if he is obviously searching your house, gun in hand, and saying, Diabolically, like in any good Hollywood thriller, " Where are YOU! I am going to KILL you!" His intent is obvious.
d. The bad guy must demonstrate by his words and actions that an attack on you or some other innocent person is IMMINENT, and CANNOT BE AVOIDED. Avoidance has caused lots of problems and is the reason that the Castle Doctrine was created, after a trial court judge mininterpreted the law in a heavily reported case more than 25 years ago. His decision was overturned, but the case still echoes across the land, and through law schools is carried on with professors teaching new law students that Avoidance means " RETREAT !"
AVOIDANCE does NOT mean " retreat!" What it refers to is the idea that if someone is searching for you, says he has a gun, but can't locate you, and you are in a place where he can't reach you within a few seconds or minutes,that you should not confront the man even to use deadly force against him to prevent him from hurting you or other innocents. Stay put. He may give up and leave.
Take as an example, a two story house, where you and your family are in beds on the second floor. You are in a position to cover the staircase leading to the second floor, so that no one can get to you or your family without coming under your gun. STAY PUT. Don't go downstairs to " investigate" or confront the guy. If you can call the police, do so. If you have a car with an alarm sitting out front, and you can turn on the alarm with your beeper, do so. If you can call neighbors to arm themselves and keep the guy from escaping the scene after he leaves your home, do so. You don't want a gunfight taking place in your own home, if it can be avoided! Those walls are not as thick as you think. And, just because you hear one person moving or talking down there does not mean he is not accompanied by friends.
I am thinking of the Harrision Ford Movie where he and his family are attacked in his home by Irish Terrorists, bound to kill him because he killed one of the attacker's brother in a shoot out while visiting London. They heard one atacker, but there were three more. They were very lucky. The family escapes out a trap door to the roof, from the second floor, before the bad guys get up there, while other innocents stay in the basement, and escape out a cellar door, leaving behind the mole who had set the attack up. There were lots of mistakes made by that family, and they still survived, simply because the script writers controlled the outcome, and not the bad guys.
Forget the " I Love Lucy " reruns where Lucy sends Desi downstairs to investigate noises. In real life she would be sending him to his death.
In some states the Castle Doctrine Statutes also prohibit civil law suits where the doctrine applies. That is important, because the felon or his relatives will sue you, and those plaintiff's lawyers will bleed you dry just in defense attorney's costs with their lawsuits. Your homeowner's policies do not cover intentional " wrong doing ", so if you are sued for wrongful death, or battery, you will not have your insurance company providing an attorney for your defense, nor paying any judgment taken against you. These states with this prohibition against such lawsuits, are the first time we have barred innocent people from being financially ruined by evil intended lawyers pursuing an anti-gun agenda for their own political purposes. Not all states have passed the Castle Doctrine, Nor do all such statutes prohibit these civil suits. You have to check the law in your own state, and check to see that such a provision is written into the Act.
This is as good a short summary of the Law of Self Defense, as it relates to the Castle Doctrine, as I can give. If you have specific questions, please P.M. me, rather than extend this topic further.
paul
Nope. I'm a Glock man. :thumbsup: Then there's also my Mossberg 500, SKS, 12-gauge double coach gun (as a last resort). For home defense, I prefer modern reliability, firepower, etc. I consider it my duty and responsibility to provide for my family's protection, and I won't rely on outdated equipment for that (unless I had nothing else).Anybody use there muzzleloaders for home defence?
Jumpshot said:LOL! I think your words are falling on deaf ears, Claude. :rotf:
ss1 said:That was THEN, this is NOW. IMHO, the reasons for not shooting some one in your home is: 1. Wrong to kill.
Wrong to kill??????
So if someone is raping your wife then you'll just stand and watch while you dial 911
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