20mm wrote:The guy is going to get the maximum. No use arguing about it.
"if duh glove don't fit
You muss aquit"
LITTLE FALLS, MINN. – In the days and weeks before Byron Smith killed two teenage intruders in his home, neighbors and friends saw him sleep-deprived and scared because of prior burglaries, they testified Friday in Smith’s nationally watched murder trial.
“He just looked very upset and fearful and shaky,” longtime neighbor Georgia Anderson told the court, saying she almost didn’t recognize Smith when he showed up at her door shortly after a burglary that took place a month before the shootings.
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Defense attorneys continued to build their case that the former State Department worker had become increasingly afraid in the fall of 2012 after several break-ins to his home and his adjacent property.
Smith claims that he acted in defense of himself and his home when he killed 18-year-old Haile Kifer and 17-year-old Nick Brady, cousins who broke in and went down his basement steps about 10 minutes apart on Thanksgiving Day.
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Smith faces life in prison if found guilty on charges of first-degree premeditated murder. The Morrison County jury will have to decide whether he acted as a reasonable person would have under the circumstances.
On Friday, William Anderson, Georgia’s husband, testified for the defense that Smith came over after an Oct. 27 burglary appearing “severely” frightened. That break-in was “number 5 or 6,” Anderson testified that Smith told him.
City alderman and cemetery superintendent Brian-Paul Crowder testified that he stopped by Smith’s property the Saturday before the shootings and Smith looked afraid while answering the door. Smith was “terribly worried because he had been broken in so many times,” Crowder said.
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The testimony capped an often-contentious week among the lawyers trying the case, including Friday as the trial was delayed for several hours. Defense attorney Steve Meshbesher had tried to call a firearms expert to the stand to testify about the effects of shooting a gun, including adrenaline and auditory ringing. But after much discussion outside the courtroom, the judge ruled against allowing it.
Meshbesher said outside the courtroom that he wanted the jury to see photos of the 12-gauge semiautomatic shotgun so they could understand what Smith feared might be used against him by thieves.
infidel wrote:What is NOT reasonable: murder after the "threat" was neutralized, moving the bodies, and waiting hours to report.
Mn01r6 wrote:You should look in to what a lesser included charge is.
xd ED wrote:gunsmith wrote:steve4102 wrote:The problem as I see it is, the First shot killed the boy, any additional shots were NOT Killing Shots of a wounded Man as the prosecution and Media contends. The second shot from the 22 is what killed the girl, any additional shots were also not Killing Shots.
Someone please Ed-u-ma-cate me on this....WHAT THE EFF DOES IT MATTER THAT THERE WERE SHOTS AFTER PERP WAS DEAD?
I'll try, but under the circumstances, I can't guarantee results.
The headline, and first paragraphs from the news:
Little Falls teens were not fatally wounded initially, M.E. testifiesLITTLE FALLS, Minn. -- The two Minnesota cousins killed by a man who claimed he was defending himself after they broke into his home were each shot multiple times, a medical examiner testified Thursday, and while the initial gunshots caused serious injury, they did not immediately kill the teens.
Byron Smith, of Little Falls, is charged with first-degree premeditated murder in the deaths of 18-year-old Haile Kifer and 17-year-old Nick Brady on Thanksgiving Day 2012. Smith, 65, claims he was defending himself and feared for his life after several break-ins at his home. But prosecutors say he sat in his basement with guns, waiting for the teens to enter his house, then went too far when he continued to shoot them after they were no longer a threat.
You're allowed your own opinion, but not your own facts.
gunsmith wrote:Mn01r6 wrote:You should look in to what a lesser included charge is.
Lesser included charges may have been filed but there is no mention in the KStp or strib coverage.
bstrawse wrote:Bearcatrp wrote:Am not going to comment on whether he is innocent or guilty. Thats the juries job. My question though is, what is the law in minnesota in reguards to shooting a burglar inside your own home? We don't have stand your ground law and we don't have the castle law. So are we to leave the house for the intruder to do as they please? I don't know what the law is so am asking.
MN 609.06 - Reasonable Force
https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/?id=609.06
MN 609.065 - Justifiable Taking of Life609.065 JUSTIFIABLE TAKING OF LIFE.
The intentional taking of the life of another is not authorized by section 609.06, except when necessary in resisting or preventing an offense which the actor reasonably believes exposes the actor or another to great bodily harm or death, or preventing the commission of a felony in the actor's place of abode.
In addition to the two cases jshuberg references, there is also State v. Pendleton in which the court held that fear of death or great bodily harm is not an element of a "defense of dwelling" claim.
http://www.lawlibrary.state.mn.us/archi ... 952162.htm
The key element in this case is that there's an obvious threat with the two individuals in the home. He used deadly force, likely lawfully, to repel that threat - but his actions after that threat was ended went *way* over the line based on my understanding of the facts.
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