ChiTownScion
Call Me a Cab
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http://www.cbsnews.com/news/tired-of-thefts-maine-man-buys-gun-and-shoots-burglar-hours-later/
I'm wondering how the use of deadly force would be justified as a matter of law at a point in time where the intruder was fleeing and had abandoned his criminal activity (flight). The common law recognizes the right of protection of self and protection of others through deadly force when necessary and reasonable to prevent further commission of a crime, but not the right of retribution. Methinks the decision to not charge the homeowner could be tempered more by compassion and the reality of a conviction being unlikely... but perhaps Maine has a statute that treats this sort of situation differently.
I'm wondering how the use of deadly force would be justified as a matter of law at a point in time where the intruder was fleeing and had abandoned his criminal activity (flight). The common law recognizes the right of protection of self and protection of others through deadly force when necessary and reasonable to prevent further commission of a crime, but not the right of retribution. Methinks the decision to not charge the homeowner could be tempered more by compassion and the reality of a conviction being unlikely... but perhaps Maine has a statute that treats this sort of situation differently.
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