Bingo, dude! My H&K is the final option for sure.RubenZ wrote:While you may not be put in Prison. You may get taken to Civil Court and that will probably COST you more money that TRIPLE of whats in your wallet or purse.
I'd love to shoot every robber out there. But when his mama and papa take you to Civil court and you have to pay 100k in Legal fees. Thats a scenario I wouldn't want to be in.
Robber running away, can you shoot him
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Um..how, he believed the guy was going to turn and shoot himbadkarma56 wrote:Frankie, I agree that the jeweler was well-briefed on buzzwords and "what not to say to po-po" by someone. He sounds like a graduate of Charles Bronson's "Death Wish" school for clever vigilantes.frankie_the_yankee wrote:Back in RI a guy once tried to rob a jewelry store. He pointed a Beretta 9mm at the owner and told him to fill up a bag with (expensive) jewelry from a case he pointed to. The owner moved to do this, but instead drew a 45ACP auto from a holster he had fastened to the underside of the top of the case (in a way that it was out of sight to patrons).nitrogen wrote:Does a man retreating from you put you in fear for your life? is a man running away an imminent threat to you or your family?
Will you be willing to severely injure someone, possibly killing them to stop them for what they stole?
That's what it comes down to, regardless of what the law says; there's a higher law here.
I can see both sides here. In some circumstances, I could see a shoot of a retreating robber being justified, but not in most cases.
The owner was quoted in the newspaper as saying, "I was sure he was going to shoot me, so I drew the gun."
At the sight of the gun, the would be robber turned and fled. The owner followed him out into the street, not to try to catch him, but in his words, "...to see where he went so I could point him out to the police."
As he is chasing the BG down the street the BG turns partly around, probably to see how close his pursuer was. Apparently, his gun hand swung around while he was doing this. The jeweler said, "I was sure he was going to shoot me, so I fired."
He ends up hitting the BG in the leg. (It was a heck of a shot.) The police caught him soon after.
As I am reading this account I'm thinking, this guy must have taken some kind of deadly force class. He said a lot of "magic words". He'd have to be one clever dude to come up with all that stuff himself.
It turned out that the 9mm was not loaded. Of course the jeweler would have no way of knowing that.
The cops didn't bring any charges and he was later no billed by the grand jury.
I'm defending the robber's acts at all, but that jeweler was very fortunate not have been indicted for something.
Wouldn't key points like that matter in a case, he feared for his life, he wanted to make sure he could tell the LEO were the badguy took off with
Sounds like well though out and intelligent responses to a situation, and it answers the Ability, Opportunity, and Jeopardy, I wouldn't have charged him if I was on his grand jury
as "Charles Bronson's "Death Wish" school for clever vigilantes" as its sounds it is the ABSOLUTE best thing because it took the vigilante out of it and turned it around to be he feared the badguy was going to shoot him
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‘All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing’ - Edmond Burke
‘All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing’ - Edmond Burke
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Can't argue with that, dude! You just have to make sure that your reactions to a bad guy don't imply any sort of "planning, scheme, or pre-meditation." It's generally best to avoid pursuing "bad guys" unless you wear a badge and arrest them for a living, know what I mean!. I intend to use my weapons for personal defense of myself and my family, I'll leave the manhunts and investigations to "Johnny Law" and the bloodhounds...Molon_labe wrote:Um..how, he believed the guy was going to turn and shoot himbadkarma56 wrote:Frankie, I agree that the jeweler was well-briefed on buzzwords and "what not to say to po-po" by someone. He sounds like a graduate of Charles Bronson's "Death Wish" school for clever vigilantes.frankie_the_yankee wrote:Back in RI a guy once tried to rob a jewelry store. He pointed a Beretta 9mm at the owner and told him to fill up a bag with (expensive) jewelry from a case he pointed to. The owner moved to do this, but instead drew a 45ACP auto from a holster he had fastened to the underside of the top of the case (in a way that it was out of sight to patrons).nitrogen wrote:Does a man retreating from you put you in fear for your life? is a man running away an imminent threat to you or your family?
Will you be willing to severely injure someone, possibly killing them to stop them for what they stole?
That's what it comes down to, regardless of what the law says; there's a higher law here.
I can see both sides here. In some circumstances, I could see a shoot of a retreating robber being justified, but not in most cases.
The owner was quoted in the newspaper as saying, "I was sure he was going to shoot me, so I drew the gun."
At the sight of the gun, the would be robber turned and fled. The owner followed him out into the street, not to try to catch him, but in his words, "...to see where he went so I could point him out to the police."
As he is chasing the BG down the street the BG turns partly around, probably to see how close his pursuer was. Apparently, his gun hand swung around while he was doing this. The jeweler said, "I was sure he was going to shoot me, so I fired."
He ends up hitting the BG in the leg. (It was a heck of a shot.) The police caught him soon after.
As I am reading this account I'm thinking, this guy must have taken some kind of deadly force class. He said a lot of "magic words". He'd have to be one clever dude to come up with all that stuff himself.
It turned out that the 9mm was not loaded. Of course the jeweler would have no way of knowing that.
The cops didn't bring any charges and he was later no billed by the grand jury.
I'm not defending the robber's acts at all, but that jeweler was very fortunate not have been indicted for something.
Wouldn't key points like that matter in a case, he feared for his life, he wanted to make sure he could tell the LEO were the badguy took off with
Sounds like well though out and intelligent responses to a situation, and it answers the Ability, Opportunity, and Jeopardy, I wouldn't have charged him if I was on his grand jury
as "Charles Bronson's "Death Wish" school for clever vigilantes" as its sounds it is the ABSOLUTE best thing because it took the vigilante out of it and turned it around to be he feared the badguy was going to shoot him
Sometimes "playing cop" can get you charged with a felony, this jeweler was lucky.
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"This is CHL holder and Texas gun owner, Bob B. Cue , and I'm in hot pursuit of a robbery suspect with my Colt .45...requesting assistance, over..."<----don't be this dude!
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P.S., I meant to say that "I am NOT defending the robber's act's at all," I went back and corrected my original reply to Frankie and the quoted text.
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Re: The Ultimate Judgment Call...
Do you ever absolutely have to? Unless he's taking up slack on his trigger, you don't really know if an armed assailant is going to kill you. Where to draw the line on what you have to stop is the controversial subject.badkarma56 wrote:However, could you personally live with the consequences of killing someone if you didn't absolutely have to?
Do I have to stop someone from severely, but presumably not fatally, wounding me? No, I have good health insurance, but I'll certainly try to stop that attacker by any means available. Car theft? I live two hours' walk from work, the grocery store, and the hospital and have a bad knee that can make that walk impossible. The insurance company will probably get a rental car to me eventually, but in the meantime, my wife and I both get to miss work, then get to miss more while we're dealing with the process of replacing the car. That said, would I snipe the guy without warning just because the law says I can use DF to prevent theft in the nighttime? No, but I will confront him loudly while armed, and with 911 on the line, and let his actions determine what happens; if he runs, he runs and I try to get direction of travel and description; if he fights or threatens me, he's probably going to get himself hurt by the most appropriate means under the circumstances; if he manages to start the car and take off with it, well, I'll see if I can get a tire or two before he's out of range to make him easier to catch and identify. I have a spare tire, and some 000 buckshot damage might make the next car thief pass it up.
See above; as a renter, a large part of my property is not insured, but my response to property crime in any but the most obviously dangerous of circumstances (say, a car thief with an obviously armed accomplice on lookout duty) will be to confront first, and let the BG decide what happens from there.I'm simply not going to shoot a man for stealing a piece of my property or my car, my insurance will cover that loss.
I was under the impression that with the law enacted on September 1st of this year that if a person justifiably defends themselves and as a result no criminal charges are filed that they are immune to civil prosecution. Is this not the case?
If no charges are filed against me if I drop a thief fleeing from me and given the recently passed law, how can I be civily prosecuted?
If no charges are filed against me if I drop a thief fleeing from me and given the recently passed law, how can I be civily prosecuted?
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This law has not been tested, as far as I know.Bodacious wrote:I was under the impression that with the law enacted on September 1st of this year that if a person justifiably defends themselves and as a result no criminal charges are filed that they are immune to civil prosecution. Is this not the case?
If no charges are filed against me if I drop a thief fleeing from me and given the recently passed law, how can I be civily prosecuted?
As I understand it, if you were justified in defending yourself and then sued, you would have to get a lawyer and he would file a motion to dismiss the suit. The judge might not dismiss it. He might think that you should prove in court that the shooting was justified. I suppose that decision could be appealed, but you're still spending money for a lawyer.
You could also be sued in federal court, in which case Texas law would not apply.
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Civil lawsuits are rarely filed against defenders by criminals or their survivors in Texas. I don't know of any that the plaintiff won.boomerang wrote:How much are we talking about? What were the five largest civil judgements against a good guy who shot a bad guy in Texas in the past two years?
But, if it happens, it's expensive to defend against, even in the preliminary stages.
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Right-o, Jim. Legal counsel is necessary but very costly.seamusTX wrote:Civil lawsuits are rarely filed against defenders by criminals or their survivors in Texas. I don't know of any that the plaintiff won.boomerang wrote:How much are we talking about? What were the five largest civil judgements against a good guy who shot a bad guy in Texas in the past two years?
But, if it happens, it's expensive to defend against, even in the preliminary stages.
- Jim
Boomerang, off the top of my head, I don't know the answer to your question about the five largest judgments against "good guys"...but I'd be happy to look into the matter...for a nominal fee that's not cost-prohibitive.
For an inquiry such as this, I only charge you $550.00 per hour, plus expenses!;-) I reckon that I'll need about 12-15 hours to resolve this issue definitively.
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Nonsense, Ruben, I only used to charge $700-$800 for a "hello"...a "how ya' doin'" would be just a bit extra!RubenZ wrote:Exactly. Just to get a Lawyer to say Hello cost a few grand LOL.
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This is a new area of protection in Texas. You're correct, the so-called "stand your ground" legislation (evolved from the "castle doctrine") would seem to shield citizens from at least some civil liability for justified self-defense shootings. From my understanding of the bill, the new protections apply in circumstances where you "justifiably" use deadly force to counter a threat of force/actual force in either the home, your car, your place of employment, or anywhere else that you "have the right to be both armed and present."Bodacious wrote:I was under the impression that with the law enacted on September 1st of this year that if a person justifiably defends themselves and as a result no criminal charges are filed that they are immune to civil prosecution. Is this not the case?
If no charges are filed against me if I drop a thief fleeing from me and given the recently passed law, how can I be civily prosecuted?
The key point here is "justifiably" ladies/gentlemen...an encounter that begins with the requisite "justification," but concludes with you shooting a bad guy in the back (as he is running away from you) hardly casts you as a "sympathetic victim" to at least certain grand juries and a few overzealous District Attorneys (no names, of course). Listen, I'm always inclined to empathize with the law-abiding citizens, but you know as well as I do that some folks won't be so gracious...particularly if you weren't facing an obvious and immediate threat at the moment of the shooting.
Of course, the difficulty with examining these situations out-of-context is that many contemporaneous events can occur in milliseconds during a real-world encounter that can shift the "reasonableness" analysis one way or the other. That's the key, you've always got assess the "reasonableness" of your acts, both with regard to society and the specific encounter at issue.
Of course, there are also the potential issues of civil liability for missed shots/errant bullets/overpenetrating bullets that unexpectedly injure bystanders, damage public/private property, cause "apprehension" or "emotional distress" among witnesses/bystanders/little old ladies, etc., etc. Do you see where I'm going here? Reminds me of an old saying I've heard before, "every bullet that leaves the muzzle of your gun potentially has a little tiny lawyer just hitchin' a ride on-board!"
Believe me when I tell ya' this, any time you ever think you've ever found a "bright line" rule in the law (i.e., the holy grail of precedents or statutes), just take a deep breath and look a bit deeper and longer and you'll normally discover at least some potential exceptions to that seemingly impenetrable rule...that's just the nature of our very adversarial and uber-competitive common law system, folks. Let's also see how the first few cases are decided under this new statutory regime.
I'd like nothing better than to feel completely protected by the state against civil suits in self defense encounters, but somehow, I just don't trust this protection quite yet. I guess I'm just paranoid , or maybe I've just become jaded by my experiences. Anyhow, some cynicism is warranted until we get some case precedents concerning this issue.
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How rare? Is it more or less common than being struck by lightning? Winning the lottery? Blizzards in Houston? It's important to understand risk in order to manage it.seamusTX wrote:Civil lawsuits are rarely filed against defenders by criminals or their survivors in Texas.
That's good news.seamusTX wrote:I don't know of any that the plaintiff won.
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Your points are well taken.
So the suit won't get filed to begin with in many cases.
Given that such suits were rare in TX to begin with, and that they will be even rarer now, I think we will be waiting a long time to see what kind of case law develops.
But from the good guy's perspective, that's a good thing.
The problem is that I think it is gong to be a while before we get some precedents. This is because the bar for winning this type of lawsuit has been raised to a point where such suits have become very difficult to win. For that reason, when a plaintiff approaches an attorney seeking to file a suit on a contingent fee basis, (the way most such suits are "funded") in many cases the attorney will judge that his chances of winning are too small to make it worthwhile to go forward.badkarma56 wrote: I'd like nothing better than to feel completely protected by the state against civil suits in self defense encounters, but somehow, I just don't trust this protection quite yet. I guess I'm just paranoid , or maybe I've just become jaded by my experiences. Anyhow, some cynicism is warranted until we get some case precedents concerning this issue.
So the suit won't get filed to begin with in many cases.
Given that such suits were rare in TX to begin with, and that they will be even rarer now, I think we will be waiting a long time to see what kind of case law develops.
But from the good guy's perspective, that's a good thing.
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