kiki5711 wrote:
I bet if she knew she was going to get 20 yrs for that, she would have shot him dead instead. Now if she shot him and claimed self defense, she'd get off free. She should have shot that bastard dead.
I had to laugh when I read the article. Problem with stand your ground law? Do you folks think that repealing stand your ground would have HELPED that lady? She didn't get convicted because of stand your ground, she got convicted because self-defense and stand your ground rules were not expansive enough to protect her in that situation, which is what you folks who oppose stand your ground want. You'd even take away stand your ground as a possible defense for this woman!
The problem with stand your ground in the case Mai linked to was that the court didn't allow the woman to invoke it. So, if you're citing that case as illustrating a "problem" with stand your ground, your problem is that the defendant didn't get to assert the defense! Which is it? Do you want stand your ground or not?
It also has added fuel to the controversy over Florida's "stand your ground" law, which the judge would not allow Alexander to invoke. State Attorney Angela Corey, who also is overseeing the prosecution of shooter George Zimmerman in the Trayvon Martin case, stands by the handling of Alexander's case. Corey says she believes Alexander aimed the gun at the man and his two sons, and the bullet she fired could have ricocheted and hit any of them.
Read more:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... z1vhEMeuUv
Maybe the problem is the "anti gun" lobby petitioning for enhanced penalties for anyone who fires a gun during the commission of a felony:
The state's "10-20-life" law was implemented in 1999 and credited with helping to lower the violent crime rate. Anyone who shows a gun in the commission of certain felonies gets an automatic 10 years in prison. Fire the gun, and it's an automatic 20 years. Shoot and wound someone, and it's 25 years to life.
Read more:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... z1vhEoQ3pg
The woman was committing a felony and shot a gun at her husband, and apparently according to Prosecutor Corey (the same prosecutor as in the Zimmerman case, actually) she fired it at her two sons too!
The Alexander case was the case of a woman who says she fired the shot in self-defense.
In August 2011, a judge rejected a motion by Alexander's attorney to grant her immunity under the "stand your ground" law. According to the judge's order, "there is insufficient evidence that the Defendant reasonably believed deadly force was needed to prevent death or great bodily harm to herself," and that the fact that she came back into the home, instead of leaving out the front or back door "is inconsistent with a person who is in genuine fear for her life."
Alexander's case was prosecuted by Angela Corey, the Florida State's Attorney who is also prosecuting George Zimmerman. Alexander was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and because she discharged a firearm during the incident, the case fell under Florida's "10-20-life" law, enacted in 1999, which mandates a 20-year sentence for use of a gun during the commission of certain crimes.
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_162- ... er-ground/
Other than the fact that Alexander is a woman, how is the result in this case not EXACTLY what the anti-stand your ground law folks want?