There is an important difference between 'Not Guilty' and 'Immune to Prosecution.'
The law stipulates that, in order to claim immunity to prosecution, someone must have been acting lawfully. He was not acting lawfully, because he possessed a firearm. Which he was not allowed to possess. Whether or not he is a murderer is beyond the point there. If he was in fact defending himself, then he shouldn't be found guilty of murder. And ideally, he wouldn't be. However, that would be taken before a jury.
The law in this case is clear. As a felon, he doesn't have a right to own a firearm. Whether you think he SHOULD or not is beside the point. The law says he does not.
As a metaphor - Imagine I stole a car and, for some reason, wasn't going to chop it, but keep it. Then, two days later, someone tries to carjack me (in my already stolen car.) Instead, I slam on the gas, and drive away. In doing so, I run over them.
Now, I will probably not be guilty of the murder. However, this ruling is that not only am I not guilty of murder for running over a carjacker, I'm also not guilty of grand theft auto, because I was using the car to defend myself.
Now, if I had gotten in a car that just happened to be present, and run over an attacker, then I would be immune from prosecution for either of those crimes. I was acting lawfully when I was attacked. Both things I did - Steal the car, hit someone with it and leave the scene - I did because I feared for my life.
The judge's ruling - That possessing a firearm is legal if you use it in self-defense, even if you are forbidden to use it because of your criminal history - Applies the law retroactively. In other words, he's considering both of those situations as the same, and that I wouldn't be a car thief because I eventually ran over someone who attacked me with it.
I'd argue that if the DA finds there to be sufficient evidence then yes, he should be PROSECUTED. However, he should not be CONVICTED. There's an important difference there. Immunity to prosecution isn't just saying you didn't do it, but that an elected official gets to decide that you can't even be accused of doing it.
The law stipulates that, in order to claim immunity to prosecution, someone must have been acting lawfully. He was not acting lawfully, because he possessed a firearm. Which he was not allowed to possess. Whether or not he is a murderer is beyond the point there. If he was in fact defending himself, then he shouldn't be found guilty of murder. And ideally, he wouldn't be. However, that would be taken before a jury.
The law in this case is clear. As a felon, he doesn't have a right to own a firearm. Whether you think he SHOULD or not is beside the point. The law says he does not.
As a metaphor - Imagine I stole a car and, for some reason, wasn't going to chop it, but keep it. Then, two days later, someone tries to carjack me (in my already stolen car.) Instead, I slam on the gas, and drive away. In doing so, I run over them.
Now, I will probably not be guilty of the murder. However, this ruling is that not only am I not guilty of murder for running over a carjacker, I'm also not guilty of grand theft auto, because I was using the car to defend myself.
Now, if I had gotten in a car that just happened to be present, and run over an attacker, then I would be immune from prosecution for either of those crimes. I was acting lawfully when I was attacked. Both things I did - Steal the car, hit someone with it and leave the scene - I did because I feared for my life.
The judge's ruling - That possessing a firearm is legal if you use it in self-defense, even if you are forbidden to use it because of your criminal history - Applies the law retroactively. In other words, he's considering both of those situations as the same, and that I wouldn't be a car thief because I eventually ran over someone who attacked me with it.
a) we're not arguing- IF this guy WAS defending himself- that he should be prosecuted for murder. what we are saying is that it does not provide immunity for having an illegal firearm.
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