Michigan considering new updated Gun law

LaVere

Inactive
This bill would do basically three things:

One: It establishes, in law, the presumption that a criminal who forcibly enters or intrudes into your home or occupied vehicle is there to cause death or great bodily harm, therefore a person may use any manner of force, including deadly force, against that person.

Two: It removes the "duty to retreat" if you are attacked in any place you have a right to be. You no longer have to turn your back on a criminal and try to run when attacked. Instead, you may stand your ground and fight back, meeting force with force, including deadly force, if you reasonably believe it is necessary to prevent death or great bodily harm to yourself or others.

Three: It provides that persons using force authorized by law shall not be prosecuted for using such force.

It also prohibits criminals and their families from suing victims for injuring or killing the criminals who have attacked them.

In short, it gives rights back to law-abiding people and forces judges and prosecutors who are prone to coddling criminals to instead focus on protecting victims.

This is Michigan's "meet force with force" or "no duty to retreat" Bill.
In part, it reads:

(3) A person who is not engaged in an unlawful activity and who is attacked in any other place where he or she has a right to be has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force if he or she reasonably believes it is necessary to do so to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or to another person or to prevent the commission of a forcible felony.
click HERE.
The gun-defense bills are House Bills 5142 & 5143
This legislation was "introduced" today, no vote or action has been taken so far.

This bill would do basically three things:

One: It establishes, in law, the presumption that a criminal who forcibly enters or intrudes into your home or occupied vehicle is there to cause death or great bodily harm, therefore a person may use any manner of force, including deadly force, against that person.

Two: It removes the "duty to retreat" if you are attacked in any place you have a right to be. You no longer have to turn your back on a criminal and try to run when attacked. Instead, you may stand your ground and fight back, meeting force with force, including deadly force, if you reasonably believe it is necessary to prevent death or great bodily harm to yourself or others.

Three: It provides that persons using force authorized by law shall not be prosecuted for using such force.

It also prohibits criminals and their families from suing victims for injuring or killing the criminals who have attacked them.

In short, it gives rights back to law-abiding people and forces judges and prosecutors who are prone to coddling criminals to instead focus on protecting victims.
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In Michigan???

Good luck!

Detroit is not Michigan. They are really just people who share the Canadian ideals living in Michigan.

If it wern't for the lower part of the lower peninsula (Detroit/Lansing/Ann Arbor/Flint), we'd be just another Montana or Alaska.
 
jefnvk said:
If it wern't for the lower part of the lower peninsula (Detroit/Lansing/Ann Arbor/Flint), we'd be just another Montana or Alaska.

I'd be okay with that, but could I stay? Please?
 
It is sure nice to see my old home state exit the draconian past.

I still come to MI a couple of times a year...though I avoid Detroit like the plague. I miss the water, and the northern half of the LP.

My AZ ccw is good there, and now the law seems to be catching up with it!
 
Heck, I even hear rumors (from-the-mouth, not-spread-by-the-internet rumors) that someone is considering a bill to allow us to have NFA goodies :cool:
 
It also prohibits criminals and their families from suing victims for injuring or killing the criminals who have attacked them.
aw jeez....the sheer fact that this even needs to be brought up in legislation astounds me :eek:
 
We have a similar law in Colorado, nicknamed the "Make My Day" law.

If anyone is in your home illegally, and you have a subjective belief they are going to harm you or commit another crime, you can shoot them. No duty to retreat. Occupant is completely immune from criminal or civil liability.

It's a great law. I believe Oklahoma and Kansas adopted identical laws after the success of Colorado.
 
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