tman wrote:gwilley1 wrote:Sounds pretty simple to me. Come in my house in the middle of the night uninvited or unexpected and you will pay for it. I won't take the chance for you to be a bad guy wanting to do harm to my family. So YES it is that simple.
Just so you know, someone who enters your house without consent, and does nothing else, has only committed a misdemeanor Trespass. The felony part is committing a crime while inside. Kill them, and you will definitely have some 'splainin' to do.
CraigJS wrote:tman, do they still have the charge of "breaking and entering". If so, what is that considered? Also doesn't much depend on your feeling threatened, as to whether or not you can use lethal force.( in home) Then lawyer up and shut up!
gyrfalcon wrote:tman wrote:gwilley1 wrote:Sounds pretty simple to me. Come in my house in the middle of the night uninvited or unexpected and you will pay for it. I won't take the chance for you to be a bad guy wanting to do harm to my family. So YES it is that simple.
Just so you know, someone who enters your house without consent, and does nothing else, has only committed a misdemeanor Trespass. The felony part is committing a crime while inside. Kill them, and you will definitely have some 'splainin' to do.
I think you have it a bit backwards, if someone enters your house without consent they have some 'splainin' to do. Also they don't have to commit a crime to be charged with burglary if it can be proven that was their intent.CraigJS wrote:tman, do they still have the charge of "breaking and entering". If so, what is that considered? Also doesn't much depend on your feeling threatened, as to whether or not you can use lethal force.( in home) Then lawyer up and shut up!
Lets say you're at home and you see someone break the glass on your window and start climbing through it. It wouldn't be prudent/legal to just shoot them without verbally confronting them and telling them to STOP or otherwise explain WTF they're doing.
I've had some folks walk into my house that I could have probably killed legally in Minnesota. They were just being stupid like the person in this case was. The difference was is that I wasn't feeling threatened or wanting to clean up blood, bullet holes and going through a major ordeal because some drunk stoners wandered through a door I should have had locked looking for a previous tenant to buy more pot from.
2beer wrote:justaguy wrote:Havent we been down this road before, Gents?
viewtopic.php?f=37&t=8177&st=0&sk=t&sd=a&hilit=trinitron
viewtopic.php?f=37&t=5088&st=0&sk=t&sd=a&hilit=trinitron
Stop it, this is not the place for reason or logic. The Internet is serious business, Al Gore said so.
jshuberg wrote:There is only one situation where I would use lethal force to prevent a burglary, and that is if the burglar managed to break into my gun safe and is trying to steal my firearms. I do not want any of my guns to end up in the hands of criminals who could use them to kill innocent people. This is the only property crime that I am willing to use deadly force to prevent. This is a personal decision of mine, not necessarily a recommendation.
justaguy wrote:What if the burglar had a hammer/crowbar/bat/knife and you had no means of escape and your child was in a different room?
How do you know it is "just" a burglary and not a home invasion with the intent to kidnap/kill you and/or your family?
jshuberg wrote:justaguy wrote:What if the burglar had a hammer/crowbar/bat/knife and you had no means of escape and your child was in a different room?
How do you know it is "just" a burglary and not a home invasion with the intent to kidnap/kill you and/or your family?
It all depends on what the burglar does when he realizes he is not alone. If he immediately tries to run away, even if he has some of my property (firearms excluded), I'll let him go and call the cops. I might follow him at a distance to get a license plate or see which direction he is going while online with 911. If he does not run away, if he advances on anyone, or gives me any indication he is armed I will defend myself and anyone else in the house. The point is I don't want to suffer the aftermath of having shot someone to protect my laptop, etc.
Either way though, the instant I suspect that there is an intruder in my house, I will arm myself and be ready to defend myself if necessary. I will give him the option of leaving without being shot, but if he doesn't take it, then he will have to suffer the consequences of the situation that he created.
justaguy wrote:Oh. I'm pretty sure everyone else was just talking about shooting first and asking questions later.
gwilley1 wrote:Sounds pretty simple to me. Come in my house in the middle of the night uninvited or unexpected and you will pay for it. I won't take the chance for you to be a bad guy wanting to do harm to my family. So YES it is that simple.
609.582 BURGLARY.
Subdivision 1.Burglary in the first degree. Whoever enters a building without consent and with intent to commit a crime, or enters a building without consent and commits a crime while in the building, either directly or as an accomplice, commits burglary in the first degree and may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than 20 years or to payment of a fine of not more than $35,000, or both, if:
(a) the building is a dwelling and another person, not an accomplice, is present in it when the burglar enters or at any time while the burglar is in the building;
(b) the burglar possesses, when entering or at any time while in the building, any of the following: a dangerous weapon, any article used or fashioned in a manner to lead the victim to reasonably believe it to be a dangerous weapon, or an explosive; or
(c) the burglar assaults a person within the building or on the building's appurtenant property.
Scott Notaeh wrote:Looks like if someone enters my house with intent to commit a crime and I am home, it is a felony.
jshuberg wrote:Scott Notaeh wrote:Looks like if someone enters my house with intent to commit a crime and I am home, it is a felony.
Correct, and according to 'defense of dwelling' you can use force, including deadly force, to prevent any felony from occurring in your home. It's still a good idea to give the intruder an opportunity to leave though - just because it's legal doesn't mean it can't ruin your life.
Heffay wrote:How can you determine intent by looks alone?
jshuberg wrote:Heffay wrote:How can you determine intent by looks alone?
You can determine intent by actions. If he tries to run away when confronted, it's better to let him than pay the attorney fees involved in making a defense of dwelling claim.
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