6:29pm: “Entered the wrong house”
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) April 17, 2023
6:34pm: “Rang the doorbell”
H/t: @pdabrosca pic.twitter.com/ONNhN6RxFM
6:29pm: “Entered the wrong house”
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) April 17, 2023
6:34pm: “Rang the doorbell”
H/t: @pdabrosca pic.twitter.com/ONNhN6RxFM
Unless you are there personally to witness these things, all you have are media accounts. Trouble is, people choose the media that fits their personal biases and all of the others are "lying".AggieUSMC said:Exactly, there are many unanswered questions in this case. This may very well be an unjustified shooting but nobody should be buying into the media narrative in light of past cases that are eerily similar to this where the initial narrative falls apart.Buck Turgidson said:
Not defending the reckless shooter, but I will point out that in the rare instances where a black kid is shot by a white person, the media goes WAAAAY out of their way to make the kid look like a cross between Bambi and Steve Erkel. Don't fall for this media driven rush to judgement. They did the same thing to a certain "white hispanic" in Florida some years back. Turns out the kid who was shot wasn't quite the angel the media was trying to pain him as. Let the investigation conclude before passing final judgement.
Wrong, the law requires a "reasonable" belief of imminent harm or unlawful entry into the house. Simply pulling on the storm door handle is not sufficient cause for "reasonable" belief.aggielostinETX said:AggieUSMC said:I think shouting a warning first would be the correct initial action. He wasn't an immediate threat unless he started trying to break the door down.Not a Bot said:
If you are 84 years old and someone is at your house after 10 PM trying to pull open your door, what are you going to think is happening? Would it be reasonable to assume a break in or home invasion is being attempted? Have to put yourself in the mind of that person.
While, that may be what you think a reasonable person would do, that is not what the law says, nor what the law requires.
Eta for accent in voice to text
I'm just going off the information that's available. And based on the current information, it doesn't seem like a good shoot. I'm certainly open to being persuaded the other way if sufficient info becomes available.Opalka said:Unless you are there personally to witness these things, all you have are media accounts. Trouble is, people choose the media that fits their personal biases and all of the others are "lying".AggieUSMC said:Exactly, there are many unanswered questions in this case. This may very well be an unjustified shooting but nobody should be buying into the media narrative in light of past cases that are eerily similar to this where the initial narrative falls apart.Buck Turgidson said:
Not defending the reckless shooter, but I will point out that in the rare instances where a black kid is shot by a white person, the media goes WAAAAY out of their way to make the kid look like a cross between Bambi and Steve Erkel. Don't fall for this media driven rush to judgement. They did the same thing to a certain "white hispanic" in Florida some years back. Turns out the kid who was shot wasn't quite the angel the media was trying to pain him as. Let the investigation conclude before passing final judgement.
Yeah, "reasonable". His actions don't sound reasonable based on current info.aggielostinETX said:
The law clearly says attempted entry and reasonable harm
Exactly, and I don't think there's a "shoot first, ask questions later" provision in MO law.Iraq2xVeteran said:
At 10 pm a black teenage male allegedly rang the doorbell, and that's going to put people one edge, especially senior citizens. I understand shooting to save your life or your property, but not when someone rings the door bell at the wrong house. Homeowner Andrew Lester could have simply told Ralph Yarl that he is at the wrong home and given him time to leave. Andrew Lester is probably a shoots first and asks questions later type person.
There was one in Louisiana, I think, a few years ago in which a Japanese foreign exchange student was shot at the wrong house.TxTarpon said:Unsure about that state, in Texas shooting through the door has resulted in homeowners not going to prison.Not a Bot said:
10pm, young black male ringing the doorbell. Unfortunately it's going to put people one edge given the events of the last several years. American minds have been trained to fear instead of trust and that's sad.
I hope this was caught on camera somewhere. If he did shoot him again after he fell he needs to go away for a long time. The first shot *may* have been legal depending on the circumstances.
We had one case in Bexar county where a guy (teen, wrong house) was shot on the ground by the homeowner after a foot chase. The jury acquitted the homeowner.
If that is true, then what crime did the kid commit that he was fleeing from?WaltonAg18 said:IIRC the language of the law says that you can fire upon someone "in the act of or fleeing from committing a crime", something along those lines.barbacoa taco said:
As in, the teen was running away from the house and the homeowner was still firing at him? I'd love to know more facts about this case because that's damn near an open and shut case for a conviction.
Did you read the part about him seeing the kid start pulling on the outer door handle?Iraq2xVeteran said:
At 10 pm a black teenage male allegedly rang the doorbell, and that's going to put people one edge, especially senior citizens. I understand shooting to save your life or your property, but not when someone rings the door bell at the wrong house. Homeowner Andrew Lester could have simply told Ralph Yarl that he is at the wrong home and given him time to leave. Andrew Lester is probably a shoots first and asks questions later type person.
They might return fire.Anonymous Source said:Jehovah's Witnesses, you're on notice!AggieCo2023 said:
You're allowed to shoot anyone who rings your door bell in the head with no warning??
Yeah, and as we all know, that's not a good type of person to be.Iraq2xVeteran said:
At 10 pm a black teenage male allegedly rang the doorbell, and that's going to put people one edge, especially senior citizens. I understand shooting to save your life or your property, but not when someone rings the door bell at the wrong house. Homeowner Andrew Lester could have simply told Ralph Yarl that he is at the wrong home and given him time to leave. Andrew Lester is probably a shoots first and asks questions later type person.
What did the prosecutor say in the Daniel Perry trial? Prosecutors lie all the time.JDCAG (NOT Colin) said:oh no said:
I have no idea what happened here; just saw this on my timeline and thought this was the right thread for it. Seems that some sites say he rang the wrong doorbell while others say he entered the wrong house.
The only thing saying he went in is the exact tweet you posted. The prosecutor has said there was no evidence of that.
AggieUSMC said:Yeah, "reasonable". His actions don't sound reasonable based on current info.aggielostinETX said:
The law clearly says attempted entry and reasonable harm
barbacoa taco said:
even if we had answers to all your questions it doesn't excuse anything
AggieKatie2 said:
Yeah, nothing I've seen thus far leads me to believe it was reasonable to believe he needed to use lethal force to prevent any of those.
"He or she reasonably believes that such deadly force is necessary to protect himself, or herself or her unborn child, or another against death, serious physical injury, or any forcible felony;"
All you have is a teenager rang your doorbell and may have touched door handle. None of that reasonably leads to death, injury, or felony.
aggielostinETX said:AggieKatie2 said:
Yeah, nothing I've seen thus far leads me to believe it was reasonable to believe he needed to use lethal force to prevent any of those.
"He or she reasonably believes that such deadly force is necessary to protect himself, or herself or her unborn child, or another against death, serious physical injury, or any forcible felony;"
All you have is a teenager rang your doorbell and may have touched door handle. None of that reasonably leads to death, injury, or felony.
Your picking and choosing facts.
I am familiar with the law generally, though I am not as well versed in the nuances in Missouri law. Nothing I have seen so far comes close to justifying deadly force in this situation, as you seem to think it does. Sounds like you really want this kid to be in the wrong here.aggielostinETX said:barbacoa taco said:
even if we had answers to all your questions it doesn't excuse anything
You need to read the law and stop responding to emotions.
For your sake, please don't shoot someone because you think they touched your front door handleaggielostinETX said:
"He may have touched handle"
Nothing you listed pertains to the law. The only thing law cares about is that he attempted to open the door and the person behind it felt there was a reasonable threat.
barbacoa taco said:
on a serious note, UPS and Fedex are probably about to start offering their delivery drivers serious hazard pay.
aggielostinETX said:barbacoa taco said:
on a serious note, UPS and Fedex are probably about to start offering their delivery drivers serious hazard pay.
The next time, one of those drivers deliver something at 10 PM and tries to open my front door, will be a first.
Do you actually know he attempted to open the door? Why are you saying that like it's a fact?aggielostinETX said:barbacoa taco said:
on a serious note, UPS and Fedex are probably about to start offering their delivery drivers serious hazard pay.
The next time, one of those drivers deliver something at 10 PM and tries to open my front door, will be a first.
At what point was their "unlawful entry" or "attempted unlawful entry"?Quote:
" Such force is used against a person who unlawfully enters, remains after unlawfully entering, or attempts to unlawfully enter a dwelling, residence, or vehicle lawfully occupied by such person; or"
Check.
[url=https://news.yahoo.com/kansas-city-man-charged-shooting-233015359.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmluZy5jb20v&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAFNc-jIcgceZDPvXl_t9i8VBpOaENH80xgZVNVDS2u7ZRPIRqERzoGTaCxSvc5zxmpuwSRGY_TyzJkdQaKc6Hftt2cx83grmTaOOYOUyGyhRhNLgTV30ZkEgCr5sIzaEHRvLyPaGisiuEBYh7FQ3cFbJXssK_oLGam8kXTtCCeFn][/url]Quote:
Lester came to the door and shot Yarl in the head then shot him again. No words were exchanged before the shooting, the probable cause statement said.
Lester told police that he lives alone and had just gone to bed when he heard his doorbell, according to a probable cause statement. He said he picked up his gun and went to the door, where he saw a Black male pulling on the exterior storm door handle and thought someone was breaking in.Link
Every weekend evening, tens of thousands or more Americans touch someone's door handle trying to figure out if the door is unlocked or if they need to ring the doorbell to get into the house party they're trying to attend.aggielostinETX said:The next time, one of those drivers deliver something at 10 PM and tries to open my front door, will be a first.barbacoa taco said:
on a serious note, UPS and Fedex are probably about to start offering their delivery drivers serious hazard pay.
I dont know the answers to the questions, so no, I cannot answer them. Why does it matter? We dont need to answer every conceivable question. Nothing revealed so far makes me think it was okay for this man to shoot the kid not once, but a second time while he was wounded.Scotty Appleton said:
Why don't you humor me and answer the 1st 2.
I know when I go to a person's house for the first time, stranger or not, I have their phone number and have them send me the address.
When people come to my house for the first time I do the same.
Do you not find that at all strange?