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Keyword: castle

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  • ‘Castle Doctrine’ revised(NC)

    11/29/2011 4:08:07 AM PST · by marktwain · 4 replies · 1+ views
    journalpatriot.com ^ | 28 November, 2011 | Jule Hubbard
    North Carolina’s new “Castle Doctrine” law, which addresses certain circumstances under which a person can legally shoot or use other deadly force against another, takes effect Thursday. North Carolina’s current Castle Doctrine only applies to homes, but under the new law it also applies to vehicles and places of work. The Castle Doctrine, rooted in English common law, expresses the belief that one should be safe from illegal intrusion in one’s home. The new law is much longer and clarifies when deadly force can be used. New law more specific The new law defines a person’s home as any property...
  • Castle Doctrine and home invasions (WI)

    11/22/2011 6:31:02 AM PST · by marktwain · 23 replies · 2+ views
    weau.com ^ | 21 November, 2011 | Chris Baylor
    With two recent armed robberies in the area, we wanted to know if anything might change with a new self defense law in place. A bill known as the ‘castle doctrine’ cleared the senate and assembly earlier this month. Monday morning in two separate incidence's two homes were robbed at gun point. One was in Eau Claire the other was in Hudson. In both cases the suspects were arrested a short time later but home invasions could soon change in Wisconsin. "With the advent of the castle doctrine the theory is if someone unlawfully enters your home armed or unarmed...
  • Republicans in Wisconsin Assembly pass self-defense bill in final legislative push

    11/01/2011 8:24:41 PM PDT · by WOBBLY BOB · 6 replies
    pioneer press ^ | scott bauer
    Under one proposal the Assembly passed Tuesday, homeowners acting in self-defense would be immune from criminal or civil liability of they kill someone who is unlawfully in their residence, vehicle or workplace. The bill requires a court to presume that the use of deadly force was necessary to prevent harm to the person being attacked or another person when the attack happens at the defender's home. "The citizens of this state, they just want to feel secure in their homes," said the bill's sponsor Rep. Dean Kaufert, R-Neenah. "They just want the ability to protect themselves without the fear of...
  • State Assembly Takes Up Self-Defense Bill(WI)

    10/02/2011 5:27:40 AM PDT · by marktwain · 4 replies
    ashlandcurrent.com ^ | 30 September, 2011 | Gilman Halsted
    A bill headed to the floor of the state Assembly would allow a person who kills or injures someone who breaks into their home, business or car, to claim self-defense. The bill strengthens what is known as the Castle doctrine and it has strong backing from the National Rifle Association and state law enforcement agencies. Before it was approved by the Assembly Judiciary Committee this week there was some debate about the definition of someone's castle or dwelling, as the bill defines it. Democratic state Rep. Tony Staskunas wanted to know what the boundaries of a dwelling are when someone...
  • Deadly force law: More trust in citizens(NH)

    09/19/2011 5:47:00 AM PDT · by marktwain · 3 replies
    unionleader.com ^ | 17 September, 2011 | NA
    On the subject of self defense, New Hampshire is about to enter a new era in which citizens have broader authority to make their own decisions. On Wednesday, the House overrode Gov. John Lynch’s veto of Senate Bill 88. The Senate had overridden the veto the week before. The bill changes state weapons laws in four important ways. 1. It removes the mere display of a weapon from the state’s definition of what constitutes the use of “deadly force.” 2. It removes the mandatory prison sentence for felonies committed while in possession of or using or attempting to use a...
  • Protection from police, prosecutors(NH)

    09/07/2011 7:06:09 PM PDT · by marktwain · 2 replies
    concordmonitor.com ^ | 7 September, 2011 | Penny Dean
    To the New Hampshire Legislature: Please override the anti-self-defense veto of Gov. John Lynch. As a defense attorney, I have represented many individuals who never fired a shot but displayed or pointed a firearm in self-defense. I can assure you that New Hampshire citizens need Senate Bill 88. Actually we need much stronger protective language, but this is the language the committee passed. The Officer Friendly that you see is not how many of these cops behave around citizens who have had to use a firearm to save themselves or others from harm. In one case, the police charged a...
  • Fear of gun law not based in fact, but personal views(NH)

    08/30/2011 4:49:58 AM PDT · by marktwain · 1 replies
    seacoastonline.com ^ | 30 August, 2011 | Michael Lesser
    The veto of Senate Bill 88 should be overridden by the Legislature. This castle doctrine legislation does not and would not allow criminals to use a firearm (probably already obtained illegally) in an illegal act, such as shooting another gang member to use this legislation as a means to escape justice. It does not even permit law-abiding citizens who legally own firearms to fire in self-defense without accountability to whether deadly force was imminent and whether it may have even been appropriate under those circumstances to use a firearm (e.g., a crowded street filled with citizens). Only the criminals and...
  • NH law enforcement: Deadly force bill unnecessary

    08/29/2011 7:03:44 AM PDT · by marktwain · 10 replies
    Bangor Daily News ^ | 28 August, 2011 | Jennifer Keefe
    DOVER, NH — Local law enforcement officials in support of Gov. John Lynch’s veto of a bill that would allow citizens to use deadly force in self-defense with civil immunity say they’re not only satisfied with the current law, but are concerned the new bill would produce unintended consequences. SB 88, which would allow a person to use deadly force to protect themselves or a third party and face civil immunity in certain circumstances, was vetoed earlier this year by Lynch, who has been vocal in his view that the bill would make the job of law enforcement more difficult....
  • Veto should stand on deadly force bill(NH Barf Alert)

    08/17/2011 1:57:16 PM PDT · by marktwain · 9 replies
    nashuatelegraph.com ^ | 17 August, 2011 | NA
    When the New Hampshire Legislature reconvenes this fall to take up the governor’s vetoes, one of the bills that appears almost certain to be overridden is SB 88, which would broaden an individual’s right to use deadly force to defend oneself in public. The House of Representatives approved the final version of the bill, 283-89, while the Senate followed suit on a 19-5 vote – both comfortably beyond the two-thirds majorities lawmakers need to override Gov. John Lynch’s veto. Just because they can, however, doesn’t mean they should. This bill is as unnecessary as it is unwise, and we urge...
  • Burglary ends in gunfire (Sheriff LOVES Texas Castle Law)

    08/16/2011 6:06:29 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 37 replies
    Daily Tribune ^ | 8/16/11 | CASEY BUECHEL
    A second degree felony charge of burglary of a habitation escalated into a first degree felony charge of aggravated robbery for three Mount Pleasant men this morning after gunshots were exchanged between the suspects and the caretaker of the building. “Burglars need to realize that if they don’t want to get shot, they shouldn’t be breaking into people’s homes,” said Titus County Sheriff Tim Ingram, who said charges would not be pursued against the caretaker of Mr. Pat’s Emporium who defended both his boss’ property and his own life this morning during a shootout with burglary suspects. The call for...
  • SB 88 VETO: More Of The Same Lies, Pandering and Demagoguery(NH castle doctrine)

    07/15/2011 6:13:56 AM PDT · by marktwain · 1 replies
    nhinsider.com ^ | 14 July, 2011 | Rick Olson
    “The sure foundations of the state are laid in knowledge, not in ignorance; and every sneer at education, at culture, at book learning, which is the recorded wisdom of the experience of mankind, is the demagogue's sneer at intelligent liberty, inviting national degeneracy and ruin.”~George William Curtis, Author, Social Reformer (1824-1896) Governor John Lynch vetoed Senate Bill 88 yesterday, once again affirming allegiance to yet another unelected, unaccountable constituency: The New Hampshire Police Chiefs Association. Despite thirty-one states adopting "stand your ground" laws and eliminating such duties to retreat, Lynch takes his counsel from those who think of themselves as...
  • 4 bills fail to pass muster with Lynch(NH)

    07/14/2011 5:19:44 AM PDT · by marktwain · 13 replies
    nashuatelegraph.com ^ | 14 July, 2011 | KEVIN LANDRIGAN
    CONCORD – Gov. John Lynch vetoed four bills Wednesday including one to expand a resident’s right to defend himself in public using deadly force (SB 88). “SB 88 would unleash the potential for increasing deadly violence in our communities,” Lynch wrote in his veto message. “It would allow the use of deadly force on street corners, in shopping malls, public parks and in retail stores. Drug dealers and other felons who brandish weapons will be further emboldened to use their weapons, while prosecution of those criminals will be made more difficult because of this bill’s expansion of the right to...
  • Bird's bill: Good gun law changes(NH)

    07/11/2011 4:50:41 AM PDT · by marktwain · 1 replies
    unionleader.com ^ | 11 July, 2011 | Staff
    Gov. John Lynch has a chance to make sure that no other Granite Stater winds up in the position in which Moultonborough farmer Ward Bird famously found himself. Bird had an angry encounter with a female stranger on his own property. He said he drew an unloaded pistol, but never pointed it at her. She said he pointed it toward her. He was convicted of felony criminal threatening and sentenced to three years in prison, the mandatory sentence for that crime. Legislators have fixed that flaw in the law, and others. The changes are contained in Senate Bill 88, which...
  • Gun rights supporter favors Castle Doctrine(PA)

    07/10/2011 5:01:09 PM PDT · by marktwain · 8 replies
    standardspeaker.com ^ | 5 July, 2011 | Bob Kalinowski
    For gun rights supporters like Rich Banks of Mountain Top, a new state law to widen the right to use deadly force in self-defense "allows good people to protect themselves." Critics say the expansion of the "Castle Doctrine" was unnecessary, that Pennsylvanians already had the right to protect themselves if their life was in jeopardy and the law could cause more violent confrontations. Last week, Gov. Tom Corbett approved the expansion of the Castle Doctrine, which allows citizens to use deadly force against an attacker at any place where they have a legal right to be. It also limits civil...
  • North Carolina Gun Politics – The Good, The Bad, & The Disappointing

    07/05/2011 6:16:35 AM PDT · by marktwain · 6 replies
    Ammoland.com ^ | 4 July, 2011 | GRNC
    North Carolina --(Ammoland.com)- “The idea of a concealed-carry in an Applebee’s bothered people…” - Republican Speaker Thom Tillis, after restaurant carry language was removed from gun legislation which passed. [Analysis] With HB 650 signed by the Governor and scheduled to become law on December 1, congratulations are due to all who responded to GRNC alerts by calling and e-mailing the NC General Assembly. Thanks are also due volunteers of the Legislative Action Team for many hours spent at the legislature, our Director and Co-Director of Communications for dozens of alerts, often sent with little notice, to our Webmaster for alerts...
  • Crime and Courts: ‘Shoot first and ask questions later’(WI Barf Alert)

    07/04/2011 4:44:55 AM PDT · by marktwain · 18 replies
    The Capial Times ^ | 3 July, 2011 | STEVEN ELBOW
    In 2007, a suburban Houston, Texas, resident named Joe Horn spotted a couple of burglars at his neighbor’s home. He called 911 and asked a dispatcher if he should stop them with his shotgun. The dispatcher told him to sit tight. “Ain’t no property worth shooting somebody over, OK?” the dispatcher said, according to published reports of the 911 call. That wasn’t OK with Horn, who noted that the “laws had been changed” in Texas, and that he had a right to protect himself. “I’m gonna kill ’em,” he told the dispatcher. And he did, with three shotgun blasts to...
  • Castle Doctrine is now state law(NC)

    07/03/2011 11:23:04 AM PDT · by marktwain · 15 replies
    gastongazette ^ | 1 July, 2011 | Kelly Hastings
    In my first state House session, I fought for jobs, education, lower taxes, less spending, public health and safety, and other conservative issues; I also fought for Second Amendment rights for law-abiding citizens and I was a primary sponsor of the main Second Amendment bill. Citizens with conceal carry permits should not be convicted if they place a carry-out order and forget to remove the firearm before picking up the food at a restaurant that serves alcohol. It is illegal for conceal carry permit holders to use drugs or alcohol while carrying. People, in general, should not be allowed to...
  • Castle Doctrine Self-Defense Bill Introduced in Wisconsin

    07/01/2011 4:20:27 AM PDT · by marktwain · 9 replies
    Ammoland.com ^ | 30 June, 2011 | David Smail
    Wisconsin --(Ammoland.com)- All but one state has granted some form of concealed carry and a growing number of states have returned to full Constitutional freedom in the right of uninfringed Constitutional Carry. Yet there is another movement sweeping across our land that should also cause great rejoicing. At this time, 38 states have some level of Castle Doctrine self-defense law. While some are more comprehensive than others, all are of significant benefit. Self-Defense From Frivolous Prosecution If you’re not familiar with the Castle Doctrine right of Self-Defense, a very basic description provides immunity from prosecution for an act of self-defense...
  • New law expands right to use deadly force in self-defense in Pennsylvania

    06/30/2011 6:10:19 AM PDT · by marktwain · 6 replies
    newsworks.org ^ | 29 June, 2011 | Elizabeth Fiedler
    Pennsylvania lawyers are mulling over the implications of a bill signed into law by Governor Tom Corbett. The "Castle Doctrine" bill expands a person's right to use deadly force to certain places outside their home, and no longer requires people to retreat as a way to avoid a lethal confrontation. Attorney Fortunato Perri Jr. is satisfied with the change in the law. "I always thought that jurors struggled with the concept that someone has a duty to retreat if possible to do safely," said Perri. "I mean that's an awfully confusing aspect of the previous statute." Perri says the expanded...
  • Governor Corbett Signs Self Defense Bill Into Law(PA)

    06/29/2011 6:26:30 AM PDT · by marktwain · 1 replies
    monachuslex.com ^ | 28 June, 2011 | John Pierce
    Moments ago, in a private ceremony in his office, Governor Tom Corbett signed House Bill 40 into law, significantly expanding the self-defense rights of the law-abiding citizens of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. As this column recently reported, despite media characterization of the bill as simply an expansion of ‘Castle Doctrine’, this bill also contains a limited ‘Stand Your Ground’ provision as well as a long anticipated legal presumption of reasonableness in certain cases of self defense. Citizens of Pennsylvania should take the time to thank Governor Corbett for signing this important piece of public safety legislation.