DFK!"
Except that all three of those are rare, with the last one being the only one that I wouldn't classify as "extremely" rare. [/quote]
How do you establish that they are rare? Also, you just said that you expect successful employment of defense under this law to be "essentially nil", so how does that make a difference?
[quote="DE wrote:
What about wrong-door raids?
What about them? If the police are simply at the wrong house, a need to knock adds one more chance for them to realize the mistake before they bust in. If they still don't realize it and do bust in, how does the citizen benefit from getting into a firefight with them? Now he's traded the likelyhood of being handcuffed for a far greater likelihood of being shot to death. I don't see how being allowed to defend himself gains him anything other than the chance for even greater
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Personally, I think that, beyond no-knock (which we appear to be on the same page on) using SWAT for arrest warrants non-violent offenders, as well as for search warrants on non-violent offenders, should be outlawed and that specific forms of redress for homes entered unlawfully should be laid out. Including, but not limited to revocation of criminal prosecution immunity for the officers (and leaders) conducting and authorizing the raids.
Police do not have immunity from prosecution for conducting raids. Qualified immunity only affects good faith actions taken in areas where the law is not already clearly established, and the laws regarding warrants are pretty well established. Police have a duty to execute warrants, but if the warrant is wrong and they know it is wrong, they have a duty not to execute it and to have the mistake fixed. If they don't know it is wrong, there arises the question of whether the same officers actually conducting the entry are the ones responsible for the error. It doesn't make a lot of sense to do anything to the ones conducting the entry if they were assured by their superiors that the warrant was correct.
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That's a pipe dream, but probably more effective than a law like this.
Then I really don't see why you think this law is a good idea. I don't see that it actually addresses a problem at all. It makes citizens feel like they can defend themselves by avoiding prosecution, but in the event something happens, there's a very high likelyhood it won't matter to the now-deceased citizen.
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That said, I see nothing wrong with this law, it has effectively simply codified the right to shoot at armed home invaders, even if they have badges on.
Edit: While codifying that right, it says nothing about whether doing so is "good," "effective," or "smart."
I don't see much point in a "right" whose primary effect is to get the citizen killed exercising it. Self-defense against criminals is one thing; criminals are not able to bring the type of resources to bear that the police can.
I predict that among those will be people shooting because they have the law as they think it should be confused with the law that is.