Actuality: GOODMAN2.WAV |
Run Time: 00:14 |
Description: "This is not, Mr. Chairman, just a gun bill. From my district, it could just as likely be a cast-iron skillet bill, or a rolling-pin bill or a golf club bill or a softball bat bill. Whatever you can get a hold of to protect your family is fair game." |
No opposition to the bill testified at the hearing.
From Jefferson City, I'm Rachel Higginbotham.
The bills make it legal for Missourians to kill anyone who uses force enter that person's home or vehicle.
Kevin Jamison, an attorney who testified in favor of the bills, said that opponents fear the use of lethal force could lead to massacres--allowing murders to hide under the guise of self-defense.
But, he said that he believes the crime scene evidence will prevent those people from taking advantage of the law.
Actuality: JAMISON2.WAV |
Run Time: 00:18 |
Description: Jack McCaul killed Wild Bill Hicock in 1876. He claimed self-defense, and even the primitive forensics of the day could tell Wild Bill was shot in the back of the head, and that defense didn't get very far. |
No one testified in opposition of the bill.
From Jefferson City, I'm Rachel Higginbotham.
Six supporters testified Monday, urging the committee to pass the bills which would, in essence, redefine the term "self-defense" when protecting property.
Currently in Missouri, the term only holds up if a homeowner fears for his or her life.
But one of the bill's sponsors, Senator Jack Goodman, said that breaking into a home or car should be treated as an act of aggression worthy of self-defense.
Actuality: GOODMAN3.WAV |
Run Time: 00:15 |
Description: "If I wake up in the middle of the night in my house, and I find an unlawful intruder in the house and I have a wife and two little boys, I'm probably not going to wait for the intruder to do something aggressive. I'm going to assume that because he broke into my house, that was his aggression." |
No one testified in opposition to the bills.
From Jefferson City, I'm Rachel Higginbotham.