Murderer Rittenhouse's accomplice gets a 12-yr term, what will Kyle get?

so you don't really know the law, you just use your feels...........stop being stupid

All self defense laws say that the perpetrator must have clean hands. So let's say you rob a bank. Someone points a gun at you after robbing the bank. You are in real fear of your life, but it is not legally self defense to kill the person pointing a gun at you. You do not have clean hands.
 
All self defense laws say that the perpetrator must have clean hands. So let's say you rob a bank. Someone points a gun at you after robbing the bank. You are in real fear of your life, but it is not legally self defense to kill the person pointing a gun at you. You do not have clean hands.

but the COURTS have also said that if you possess a gun IN YOUR HOME, even if you're a convicted felon, and you use that gun in defense of yourself IN YOUR HOME, you cannot be charged with a crime of possessing a gun illegally...........
 
but the COURTS have also said that if you possess a gun IN YOUR HOME, even if you're a convicted felon, and you use that gun in defense of yourself IN YOUR HOME, you cannot be charged with a crime of possessing a gun illegally...........

Somehow I doubt that, but go ahead and blow me away. Prove to me that you cannot be charged with a crime of illegally buying a gun, if you later use that gun in self defense.

You would have had a better shot claiming that you can legally use an illegal gun to protect your own home. The crime of having an illegal gun is not involved in the protecting of the home.
 
i'll say it again, those that don't know the laws, how they work, and how the courts decide within those laws, should keep their mouths shut and be thought a fool than to open it up and prove it.
Which is why you should quit now.

You look like a moron
 
Somehow I doubt that, but go ahead and blow me away. Prove to me that you cannot be charged with a crime of illegally buying a gun, if you later use that gun in self defense.
first off, I said own, not buy........because there are different circumstances with buying.............

https://www.greenvillecriminaldefenselaw.com/convicted-felon/

Generally speaking, a person convicted of a felony is prohibited from possessing a firearm under both state and federal law. North Carolina General Statute § 14-415.1 states “t shall be unlawful for any person who has been convicted of a felony to purchase, own, possess, or have in his custody, care or control any firearm or weapon of mass death and destruction as defined in G.S. 14-288.8(c).” 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) is the federal prohibition against possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Despite these specific prohibitions, the North Carolina Supreme Court recently recognized that in narrow and extraordinary circumstances, a convicted felon may use a weapon in self-defense and assert “justification” as a defense to a prosecution for a violation of G.S. § 14-415.1

You would have had a better shot claiming that you can legally use an illegal gun to protect your own home. The crime of having an illegal gun is not involved in the protecting of the home.
wordsmithing...........or basically you misconstruing my words so you can make yourself believe you were right all along.............go away loser
 
Generally speaking, a person convicted of a felony is prohibited from possessing a firearm under both state and federal law. North Carolina General Statute § 14-415.1 states “t shall be unlawful for any person who has been convicted of a felony to purchase, own, possess, or have in his custody, care or control any firearm or weapon of mass death and destruction as defined in G.S. 14-288.8(c).” 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) is the federal prohibition against possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Despite these specific prohibitions, the North Carolina Supreme Court recently recognized that in narrow and extraordinary circumstances, a convicted felon may use a weapon in self-defense and assert “justification” as a defense to a prosecution for a violation of G.S. § 14-415.1


See that makes sense, unlike your first claim. As long as the possession is for a short time, starting with the intrusion, that would usually be OK. But if they had the weapon before the break-in, that is a crime.

A common trick is for a convicted felon to have his wife buy the gun, and store it in their joint house. This can mess up a parole, but after the parole, it might be legal. The felon can then pickup the gun upon the break in.

wordsmithing[/QUOTES]

Laws written in words.
 
OP is a liar. The guy has not been found guilty yet. He's just been charged and could get 12 years. Even if found guilty he may get probation.
 
One with a Swastika on it

....to go with the bar of soap his new friends in prison will give him.

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