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Ahmaud Arbery murder case
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<blockquote data-quote="RonJohn" data-source="post: 720562" data-attributes="member: 2426"><p>This entire subject came out of a discussion about the trespassing statute. As I read the trespassing statute, unless a person intentionally causes damage to property, is notified by the owner not to enter the property, or is asked by the owner to leave the property, he hasn't violated the trespassing statute. Other people have pushed back to say that merely entering an unlocked house is illegal. I have asked for those people to let me know what statute would be violated. Instead of looking for statutes, they turned it into some scenario of: You enter your house and there is someone you don't know lounging on your couch, can you pull out your gun and force him to wait until the police arrive.</p><p></p><p>The entire discussion started with the Arbery case and whether or not the McMichaels witnessed a crime in progress, which would allow them to conduct a citizen's arrest, and whether any such crime was a felony which would allow the Mcmichaels to pursue Arbery if he was fleeing. We are so far down rabbit holes at this point that it has absolutely nothing to do with the Arbery case, even tangentially.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RonJohn, post: 720562, member: 2426"] This entire subject came out of a discussion about the trespassing statute. As I read the trespassing statute, unless a person intentionally causes damage to property, is notified by the owner not to enter the property, or is asked by the owner to leave the property, he hasn't violated the trespassing statute. Other people have pushed back to say that merely entering an unlocked house is illegal. I have asked for those people to let me know what statute would be violated. Instead of looking for statutes, they turned it into some scenario of: You enter your house and there is someone you don't know lounging on your couch, can you pull out your gun and force him to wait until the police arrive. The entire discussion started with the Arbery case and whether or not the McMichaels witnessed a crime in progress, which would allow them to conduct a citizen's arrest, and whether any such crime was a felony which would allow the Mcmichaels to pursue Arbery if he was fleeing. We are so far down rabbit holes at this point that it has absolutely nothing to do with the Arbery case, even tangentially. [/QUOTE]
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