Castle Doctrine takes away the duty to retreat. I really want the other party to have that duty when I'm not the homeowner. Under the Castle Doctrine, conceivably any shooting could be claimed as a defense of castle, even when the other party (the poor bastard getting shot) was running away. If my grandkid kicks his soccer ball into my neighbor's yard, I knock on the door and get no answer, so I go back there and get the ball and he shoots me, under Castle, it is possibly justifiable. Under duty to retreat, usually not.
Originally Posted by Jewish Lawyer
Of course, anything is possible.
Again, it just changes the burden of proof. Not whether the act itself is criminal or self defense.
If I shoot someone in the back or retrieving a ball from my back yard I can still be brought to a Grand Jury. The difference is I don't have to prove I was in fear of my life. The prosecution has to prove I wasn't. If I shoot someone in the back chances are it should pretty easy to convince a jury that I acted out of malice not self defense.
I know you can point to Joe Horn but I think that is the exception and most people didn't understand how the law changed things at that time and felt vigilantism was justified by the law. Prosecutors today would have a much better chance at getting a conviction because they know how to approach it.