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Thu 14 Apr, 2011 05:48 pm
State House approves "Castle Doctrine"
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
By Tracie Mauriello, Post-Gazette Harrisburg Bureau
HARRISBURG --
The state House this afternoon overwhelmingly approved a bill
expanding people's legal right to defend themselves and their families.
The legislation removes the obligation to first seek a reasonable
attempt to get away before using lethal force in self-defense.
"Now there will be no duty to retreat. You can defend yourself,"
said bill sponsor Scott Perry, R-York.
"Right now citizens have to spend precious moments and precious
seconds ... determining whether to run to the next room, the next
building or around the car," he said in an interview after the House vote.
"That's not a decision that we want our citizens having to make at
the critical moment when it might be the difference between life and death."
The provisions apply to law-abiding people anywhere
they have a legal right to be.
The legislation is intended as protection against criminal and civil penalties
for people who fire guns to defend themselves and their families
from imminent threats.
Opponents say the bill, dubbed the Castle Doctrine, puts lives at risk
and creates a Wild West mentality in Pennsylvania.
"Do we really want to encourage people to use deadly force because
they think they have an out with the Castle Doctrine?" Rep. Mike
Gerber, D-Montgomery, asked on the House floor. "I'm not saying [we
shouldn't] establish a law that enables people to protect themselves
in their homes and in their vehicles, but let's get it right if we're
going to do it. ... Let's craft it narrowly."
A similar bill passed both legislative chambers last year but was
vetoed by Democrat then-Gov. Ed Rendell.
Republican Gov. Tom Corbett has said he will sign it.
First the bill must go to the Senate, which last month passed a bill
with identical language. Both chambers must pass the same bill
for it to be sent to the governor.
The House could have sped up enactment by passing the Senate version,
but Mr. Perry said the legislation originated in his chamber and
people there want passage of their bill.
[All emfasis has been added by David.]
Behold how the Democrats stick up for the criminals,
against the decent people:
"Do we really want to encourage people to use deadly force because
they think they have an out with the Castle Doctrine?" Rep. Mike
Gerber, D-Montgomery, asked on the House floor. "I'm not saying [we
shouldn't] establish a law that enables people to protect themselves
in their homes and in their vehicles, but let's get it right if we're
going to do it. ... Let's craft it narrowly."
When u r fighting for your LIFE,
the Demos want u to have AS LITTLE legal freedom to do so.
To protect the criminal u shoud fear the State
government as much as its partner: the criminal.
That 's what the Demos want.