Saturday, March 3, 2012

And so the Castle Law takes a life.


Hey, the guy was drunk from a nearby party, and wondered off into someone’s yard, why shouldn’t he be dead? You just never know…and that’s why our new gun law was so smartly put together by Sen. Pam Galloway, so it could include an excuse to shoot first at the expense of innocent people.

Thank you Republican legislature, thank you Scott Walker for being a party to murder.
jsonline: Slinger police are investigating a fatal shooting at a house near another where officers earlier received a call complaining about a suspected underage drinking party.  (At 12:50 am) Police weren't able to reach anyone at the house when they were called about the party. They found the body of a 20-year-old at a neighbor's house when one of the homeowners called to say that he'd shot an intruder.

They spoke to one of the neighboring homeowners by phone who said she was at work. After police left, the woman contacted police and said she had reached her husband. She said her husband was asleep at the neighboring house … About 2 a.m., the neighboring husband called police to say he had shot an intruder.

When officers arrived, they found a 20-year-old man on the porch who had been shot in the chest. He was dead at the scene. The husband is cooperating with investigators, police said.
On the porch? What a threat, if you're a dumb as gun nut. 

5 comments:

  1. Actions have consequences.
    Fear-mongering develops unnecessary fear.
    Guns don't think.
    Guns kill people.
    Will it take a legislator shooting a gun in the Assembly to make people see what kind of a society are creating?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Actions have consequences.
    Fear-mongering develops unnecessary fear.
    Guns don't think.
    Guns kill people.
    Will it take a legislator shooting a gun in the Assembly to make people see what kind of a society are creating?
    scMM

    ReplyDelete
  3. So the next time I go canvassing in Mequon to seek support for a Dem candidate you can bet that I will ring the doorbell and step down off the porch.

    I can remember what the Mequon man said to me as he opened the door. "I support Darling and get get off my property!" he said it in a angry tone.

    So does the castle doctrine allow someone to shoot someone on your porch or stoop who has rung your doorbell?

    So much for selling girl scout cookies!

    This has me scared.

    Strike three?

    ReplyDelete
  4. This is what we warned about, and it's come to pass. The family that has now suffered this loss is our new victim.

    ReplyDelete
  5. My grandson was shot to death five days before his court date as a prosecution witness, but the DA released his killer, calling it self defense. By some accounts she also released the one who committed the murder that my grandson witnessed (!), but that's just hearsay - I don't have proof even though I think it's probably true. Whoever released him (illegally because he was already in jail and had been remanded to prison) turned loose a violent man who killed another man about nine hours after his release. This incident really opened my eyes. In some cases a defender actually is in a shoot or die situation, but in others the claim of self-defense is an attempt to hide a murder. That's the reality of it.

    I invite you to my blog on this subject (Failures of Castle Laws). Go to the following link and click into blog (the link to the blog is in the blue stripe beneath the "cliffs" panorama):

    http://www.cliffs-of-cotter.com

    John R. Wright

    ReplyDelete