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No Charges for Teen Widow Who Used Deadly Force Against Intruder
http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/20...illed-intruder
I can't get the article excerpt to copy right, but basically an 18 year old widow (her husband was 58 and had just been buried that day - which I'm sure is it's own story) with a 3 month old baby used deadly force against an intruder which is permissable in OK. The intruder's accomplice is being charged with the muder. Where I think this story is goofy is that it said she had been on the line with the 911 operator for 20 minutes...where were the police? |
The way it sounded to me was that she was in a very rural area. 20 minutes for a police or EMS response is not unheard of in some areas near where I live.
And good for her. Despite her odd situation with the husband, she was smart enough to keep a cool head about her during this whole thing and did the right thing. |
The woman did what she felt necessary to do for her and her child's safety, but I'm not understanding why the accomplice was charged with first degree murder?
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No, I read it. It just doesn't make any sense to me.
The accomplice didn't pull the trigger, obviously. I would assume that investigators ruled out the possibility that the accomplice wasn't somehow forced to participate, but that's not known from the article. |
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As long as there is a felony act in which a death occurs, you can be charged with that murder even though you had no intent to kill nor did you actually pull the trigger. DaffyKD |
GOOD GIRL!!! Proud of her & her shooting skills. She could be a Texan, although we wouldn't bother to ask a 911 operator for permission to kill the bastards. I'm just sorry that she didn't get them both.
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I'm sorry but that sounds like a injustice to me. The other guy was in no way responsible for the other person being killed.
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And this is not the first time I've heard of something like this happening. |
I have no argument with the felony murder rule, but I hadn't heard of it being applied in a case where the death was the death of an accomplice. Victim, bystander, cop, firefighter, yes, but not a fellow perpetrator. Maybe someone with more criminal experience than I have can tell me if this is usually the charge on these facts.
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Here's what gave thought to my earlier comment, however. How is it that criminal participants can do/commit the same crime, yet one or more often get lesser or more severe sentences than their co-criminals (and I undertstand people turning state's evidence on each other in exchange for lighter sentences.) Are their reasons, other than state's evidence, for this? And, in your opinion, does the co-criminal in the OP likely carry the 1st degree charge becuase a death occurred? Don't you just love the way I assumed you were an attorney? |
I've seen it applied that way before.
Bob and Ray rob a convenience store. Ray waits in the getaway car while Bob goes in to actually commit the robbery. Cashier shoots and kills Bob. According to the law, Ray is responsible for Bob's death, as they were committing the crime together. |
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The general idea is this: if one forms the intent to commit a felony and carries out that felony, then one can be charged with any death that occurs as as a result from the commission of that felony. In other words, if you break into someone's house to commit robbery, you then have to accept the consequences if a death result from that crime, even if it's the death of your accomplice. At least that's the general idea. Exactly how it works in Oklahoma, someone else would have to say. Paging Kevin! |
Just read this story from several other sources and one of them called her the "Make My Day Mom". LOVE IT!!!
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