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In reply to the discussion: Judge denies 'stand your ground' motion in retired OPD officer's shooting of son [View all]ProgressiveProfessor
(22,144 posts)50. You are quite correct, they are separate issues before the court
However, if the decision was that even though your fear was reasonable but you did not retreat though could have, you would have committed a crime under DTR regimes and could face serious jail time. It is that kind of subjective and at time capricious second guessing that lead to both CD and SYG.
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Judge denies 'stand your ground' motion in retired OPD officer's shooting of son [View all]
SecularMotion
Nov 2012
OP
the burden of proof should always be on the Crown/State you prove that a crime was committed by
gejohnston
Nov 2012
#23
Illinois Law is not the same. There is a duty to retreat outside the home.
Starboard Tack
Nov 2012
#19
Even under DTR, shouldn't the burden be on the state to prove that you failed to retreat?
petronius
Nov 2012
#41
Perhaps I'm mistaken, but I thought that to succeed with a claim of self-defense, the shooter
petronius
Nov 2012
#49
The poster has a long history of conflating the two and calling it SYG
ProgressiveProfessor
Nov 2012
#38
Sometimes the facts are ugly. Your continued posting of clear misinformation needs countered
ProgressiveProfessor
Nov 2012
#35
The accused try to "hide" behind any law they think will work in their favor.
Eleanors38
Nov 2012
#52
Sounds Like Stand Your Ground Laws are Used to Defend Themselves Against Criminal Charges
fightthegoodfightnow
Nov 2012
#27
Actually it did, often codifying what was precedent in many states
ProgressiveProfessor
Nov 2012
#47
If it was that simple, there would not have been the need for CD nor the whining over SYG
ProgressiveProfessor
Nov 2012
#51