Despite Zimmerman Verdict Outcry, Repeal Of Stand-Your-Ground Laws Unlikely

By admin July 22, 2013 04:08
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stand yourDespite an outcry from civil rights groups, a call for close examination by  President Barack Obama and even a 1960s-style sit-in at the Florida governor’s  office, the jury’s verdict that George Zimmerman was justified in shooting  unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin is unlikely to spur change to any of the  nation’s stand-your-ground self-defense laws.

“I support stand your ground,” Republican Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer said last  week.

“I do not see any reason to change it,” said Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal, also a  Republican.

At least 22 states have laws similar to that in Florida, according to the  National Conference of State Legislatures. Many are conservative and lean toward  laws that defend gun owners’ rights. So far, there does not appear to be an  appetite in Florida or other states to repeal or change the laws, which  generally eliminate a person’s duty to retreat in the face of a serious physical  threat. In fact, some states are moving in the opposite direction.

“The debate about stand-your-ground laws largely reproduces existing  divisions in American politics, particularly between blacks and whites and  between Democrats and Republicans,” said John Sides, associate professor of  political science at George Washington University.

Zimmerman, a 29-year-old former neighborhood watch volunteer, was acquitted  this month of second-degree murder and manslaughter charges in the 2012 shooting  of 17-year-old Martin in a gated community in Sanford, Fla. Zimmerman told  police he shot Martin only after the African-American teenager physically  attacked him; Martin’s family and supporters say Zimmerman, who identifies  himself as Hispanic, racially profiled Martin as a potential criminal and  wrongly followed him.

Zimmerman’s lawyers decided not to pursue a pretrial immunity hearing allowed  by Florida’s stand-your-ground law. But jurors were told in final instructions  by Circuit Judge Debra Nelson that they should acquit Zimmerman if they found  “he had no duty to retreat and had the right to stand his ground and meet force  with force, including deadly force if he reasonably believed that it was  necessary.”

Before the stand-your-ground law was passed in 2005, the instruction would  have read that Zimmerman “cannot justify his use of force likely to cause death  or great bodily harm if by retreating he could have avoided the need to use that  force.”

Since the law was enacted, justifiable homicides in Florida have risen from  an annual average of 13.2 between 2001 and 2005 to an average of 42 between 2006  and 2012, including a record 66 in 2012, according to the Florida Department of  Law Enforcement. FBI data have shown similar increases in some states that  enacted similar laws, such as Texas, while others haven’t seen an uptick.

Beyond Florida, these states have some form of a stand-your-ground law,  according to the national group: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Indiana,  Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, New  Hampshire, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee,  Texas, Utah and West Virginia.

Attorney General Eric Holder, in a speech last week to the NAACP convention  in Orlando, said the Martin shooting demonstrates a need to re-examine  stand-your-ground laws nationwide. He said they “senselessly expand the concept  of self-defense” and increase the possibility of deadly confrontations.

Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2013/07/21/despite-outcry-over-george-zimmerman-verdict-repeal-nations-stand-your-ground/#ixzz2Zk5F6fXM

By admin July 22, 2013 04:08

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