(http://domelights.com/groupee/forums/a/tpc/f/1166081461/m/7071048383/r/7071048383#7071048383)
  
i just wanted to post this article i saw 
 it is not my intention to start a pro/anti gun control debate i  just wanted 
to add to the discussion 
 
:

By Richard Willing, USA  TODAY

(March 21) -- A year after Florida became the first state to  allow citizens 
to use deadly force against muggers, carjackers and other  attackers, the idea 
is spreading. 

South Dakota has enacted a  similar law, Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels plans to 
sign such a measure  today, and 15 other states are considering such proposals.

Several  states are expanding self-defense rights to crimes committed in  
public.

Dubbed "Stand Your Ground" bills by supporters such as the  National Rifle 
Association, the measures generally grant immunity from  prosecution and 
lawsuits to those who use deadly force to combat any  unlawful entry or attack. 

Several states allow people to use  deadly force in their homes against 
intruders; the new measures represent  an expansion of self-defense rights to 
crimes committed in  public.

The NRA and other supporters say the bills are needed in  many states that 
require people under attack in public places to withdraw  from the situation, 
rather than retaliate, unless they can show their  lives are in danger. 

"For someone attacked by criminals to be  victimized a second time by a 
second-guessing legal system is wrong," the  NRA's Wayne LaPierre says.

Critics, including the Brady Campaign To  Prevent Gun Violence, say the bills 
encourage vigilantism and would make  it more likely that confrontations 
would turn deadly. Zach Ragbourn of the  Brady group says the proposals "are 
more 
accurately called 'Shoot First'  laws. They allow a person who just feels 
something bad is going to happen  to open fire in public."

The idea that people should use deadly  force only to defend their lives is 
rooted in English common law, author  Richard Maxwell Brown says in No Duty To 
Retreat: Violence and Values in  American History and Society. 

Another common law principle, the  "duty to retreat," requires people to 
avoid potentially deadly  confrontations. The principles apply in most states. 

The duty to  retreat generally doesn't apply in a person's home.

LaPierre says  the NRA is targeting 29 duty-to-retreat states where people 
can be  prosecuted, sued or both if they don't retreat from criminal  attacks.

Ragbourn says the proposals aim to "fix a system that  isn't broken. People 
aren't being thrown into jail for legitimate  self-defense. There's no crisis 
here."

Florida's law could be  facing its first test. 

Donald Montanez, owner of a Tampa towing  company, is charged with murder in 
the shooting of a man whose car was  impounded. Prosecutors say Montanez fired 
as the man drove off without  paying a fee. Montanez's attorney, Roger Rigau, 
says the new law should  protect Montanez, who feared being hit by the 
driver.  




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