What everyone already knows – is wrong
Only some people have a right to defend themselves in their dwelling, according to usual police procedure. If the police are called, and someone outside the situation has determined the situation to be “domestic violence”, whether they are in full knowledge of events or not, then no man in Yuma County may defend himself.
Only women are allowed to defend themselves under current procedure. Whether this is a matter of ordinance or law, I’m not sure, but it is the way these issues are handled in practice.
Last October, as a Crew Leader in the Census operation working at the time, I was ordered to fire a man because he’d made the mistake of calling police for help. His roommate had come home intoxicated, was breaking up furniture, and threatening him personally. My employee, logically enough, as this was not a relationship problem, phoned police for help, and was charged with a crime for doing so.
Had he been a woman, nothing of the kind would have happened. Responding officers may or may not have encouraged a woman in this situation to go to a shelter, but certainly there would not have been any charges.
Knowing the circumstances, I refused to fire the man, on the grounds that here in Yuma we can sometimes still hope that our judges might still work on the premise of “innocent until proven guilty.”
Otherwise, a man attempting to defend himself in his home today has two choices; to allow himself to be killed or assaulted by a family member, or just go to jail. He certainly cannot expect to get any help from our sheriff’s deputies or police.
They likely have been trained by The AZ Coalition Against Domestic Violence, who advocates jailing (or at least a good “retraining”) of all men, because they have determined that all men are violent abusers in need of “help.” Likewise in this training, women are idiots without any understanding of their lives, who also must accept the help of this dubious agency.
I wonder if this deadly force provision to current law may extend powers previously given only to such people as Presidents and Governors of States
Past Governor Jane Hull allowed a Camp Verde woman to go free, despite the fact she’d been convicted of the premeditated murder of her husband. This Arizonan had already chosen to use deadly force. Nevermind she’s obviously a sociopath.
If the so-called “deadly force” idea is allowed to migrate into law, I have serious concerns that it may well turn into the “Kill Bill” concept.
It’s already OK in AZ to off your old man.
I think the public needs to know a lot more about this thing before we can decide.