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Homeowner uses Samurai Sword to kill burglar

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
The burglar lunged at the home owner, the home owner stabbed the burglar with the sword, and the police may charge the home owner? What kind of screwed up state laws would allow that???
Johns Hopkins Med Student Kills Thief With Samurai Sword
Suspected burglar had a nearly severed hand

By ASHA BEH
Updated 8:45 PM EDT, Tue, Sep 15, 2009
http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/l...-Kills-Thief-With-Samurai-Sword-59329902.html

A Johns Hopkins University medical student armed with a samurai sword killed a man who allegedly broke into his garage early Tuesday, Baltimore police said. It wasn't the first time burglars had hit the student's home. On Monday, thieves took two laptops and a Sony PlayStation from the house, according to police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi.

But it might be the last.

According to Guglielmi, campus police and an off-duty city officer, responding to a call for a suspicious person in the 300 block of E. University Parkway, heard shouts and screams from a neighboring house. That's when they found the suspected burglar, 49-year-old Ronald Rice, who was unarmed.

During a subsequent interview with the police, the student said that he heard a commotion in the house and went downstairs with the samurai sword. The student said he told the man to leave, but the suspected burglar lunged at him instead. That's when, according to Guglielmi, the student defended himself, cutting off Rice's hand and causing a severe laceration to the man's upper body.

Rice died at the scene, Guglielmi said. He had prior convictions for breaking and entering and had just been released Saturday from a Baltimore County facility, according to Guglielmi.

Police interviewed the student's three roommates, who are also Hopkins students, and questioned the student for hours before releasing him. The police also talked to prosecutors about whether to file charges.

Police described Rice as a career criminal with a history of 29 arrests who had just been released from prison Saturday after serving a yearlong sentence. It's unknown if he was involved in Monday's break-in.​
 
Castle law.

Sadly not all states have such laws. And those which have such laws seem to vary, some protecting the home owner from criminal & civil suits, others only protecting from criminal prosecution.
 
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