• chunkystyles@sopuli.xyz
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    2 days ago

    It’s been a long time since I’ve heard about this case, but my recollection was that he left his garage door open and parked away from his house so it would appear open and unoccupied. I didn’t see anything on the Wikipedia page that refutes that.

    • WeirdGoesPro@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      Smith had been visiting neighbors when he saw Kifer, whom he suspected was responsible for the burglaries, driving past his home. He commented that he needed to get ready for her and went back to his home. Upon entering his home, Smith turned on a recording device he owned. He removed the light bulbs from the ceiling lights and positioned himself in a chair that was obscured from view. He heard the window upstairs break and Brady climb in (captured on audio).

      There may have been a window from the garage to the house or something, but it clearly says they broke a window, entered his home, and proceeded to the basement where they were shot. He had previously been burgled in the garage too, which Wikipedia says he was unaware about until police found evidence of a prior burglary. The house had been burgled previously as well, which is why he was looking out for people casing his house.

      I hope none of this comes off as a defense of that asshole, but facts matter, and those teens did commit a crime. I don’t think they deserved to be executed for it, but he was within his rights to defend himself when they broke in to his home. He was not within his rights to execute them after the threat was over.

      • Madison420@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        but he was within his rights to defend himself when they broke in to his home.

        No he wasn’t, read the actual case transcript.

        He was not within his rights to execute them after the threat was over.

        There was never a threat, you really really need to read the court transcripts.

        • Narauko@lemmy.world
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          18 hours ago

          It depends on the State for specific legality.

          Armed or not, an actual threat or not, an intruder into an occupied home leaves benefit of the doubt at the entry point they used to get in. It might have been intended as a burglary instead of a home invasion, but the perpetrator does not get to make that distinction.

          There is a tangible difference between regular property crime like shoplifting, fraud, or theft outside of a dwelling and the violation of a home. And another tangible difference if that home is occupied.

          • Madison420@lemmy.world
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            14 hours ago

            Sure, this is adjudicated though there’s absolutely zero question to it at this point.

            No one said they did.

            Correct, the jury instructions are public and literally all of that is in it.

            I’m not even quite sure what your point is.

            • Narauko@lemmy.world
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              5 hours ago

              The US is over-policed, while simultaneously being under-policed for certain demographics, by a street gang operating under the color of law. We have an overabundance of bad shoots by the cops executing people for nonviolent propert crimes that needs to be dealt with. This is a real issue.

              There is also a tendency for some to conflate that with self defense of/in a home under the (generally correct) idea that no property crime deserves the death penalty, like McDonalds managed to conflate the coffee burned old lady with frivolous lawsuits. I am saying that once you break into a home it is no longer “property crime” but something else.

          • Madison420@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            I probably have my copy at home but I’d have to dig.

            If you do the case number and FOIA it from the court it was in you’ll get a copy, that’s how I got mine.