Glocksman wrote:As an aside, Indiana state law allows one to use deadly force to protect one's dwelling, but again the 'reasonable person' standard applies.
That won't help him at all, since he did not give ANY warning whatsoever that he was going to use force or warn off said person.
That's not the definition of reasonable force.
Justforfun000 wrote:I honestly don't know how I feel about this. Part of me is like "Fuck yeah, if they're trying to enter my home and steal things, then fuck 'em and the horse they rode in on. "
But at the same time, I can't quite approve killing another person unless it is truly necessary. Obviously anyone attacking you physically in those circumstances are threatening a person with an unknown intention of violence. People are not usually acquainted with a burglar, and in the midst of a robbery, who's to say what this person will deign to do? I would still aim to incapacitate the person over killing them, but I wouldn't judge someone who killed them, either.
Who wants to take a fucking chance? If they kill you, it's game over. No restart or drop back to earlier levels.
Anyone willing to commit a very serious crime against another is leaving themselves open to whatever defense measures the victim opts to take against them. There is a reason why things are illegal and punished very severely when sentenced to pay for said crime.
I do think it's ridiculous to have laws protecting such criminals from retribution against their actions. I forget if that's the case here in Canada or not..It wouldn't surprise me. Good as our country is, it has some really back asswards laws.
So, if said person was utterly helpless, is the continued use of force reasonable?
Look at it here. Said person had NEVER warned the person off his property before. His wife may had done so, but not him. Said person did not have the oppurtinity to actually HURT anyone. Said intruder did not have the means to actually HURT anyone. The account said nothing about him having any weapons or means of arson, nor was he carrying any stolen goods.
Yet, this guy continued to pound him and KEPT pounding him when he had no possible means of even resisting and was lying helpless on the ground bleeding. That's plain and simple brutality right there and then, even if you ignore all the issues about "reasonable" force.
If said person had been in his house as opposed to just being on his property, or the doors/windows were unlocked and he had the chance to get in and hurt someone or steal something before the guy could react, the use of force might had been reasonable. However, continuing to pound him AFTER he was helpless is NOT.
What he did was simply not justifiable OR legal.
Let him land on any Lyran world to taste firsthand the wrath of peace loving people thwarted by the myopic greed of a few miserly old farts- Katrina Steiner