Fatal shooting of University of South Carolina student who tried to enter wrong home 'justifiable,' police say

MicroWave@lemmy.world to News@lemmy.world – 440 points –
Fatal shooting of University of South Carolina student who tried to enter wrong home 'justifiable,' police say
nbcnews.com

The homeowner who fatally shot a 20-year-old University of South Carolina student who tried to enter the wrong home on the street he lived on Saturday morning will not face charges because the incident was deemed "a justifiable homicide" under state law, Columbia police announced Wednesday.

Police said the identity of the homeowner who fired the gunshot that killed Nicholas Donofrio shortly before 2 a.m. Saturday will not be released because the police department and the Fifth Circuit Solicitor’s Office determined his actions were justified under the state's controversial "castle doctrine" law, which holds that people can act in self-defense towards "intruders and attackers without fear of prosecution or civil action for acting in defense of themselves and others."

340

You are viewing a single comment

I love not living in america

It's glorious.

The U.S. spends a tremendous amount of its energy on paranoia, checks and balances, and being remarkably resistant to large-scale changes of the status quo, particularly with respect to rights attendant to private property.

In the current period of bullet trains, wind farms, and unisex bathrooms, it is incredibly inconvenient, even dangerous in its own right. It looks like an operating system bug, but only because it is holding up a feature that the real owners of America don't like advertised.

There is a reason the dollar is still the global reserve currency- because the entire system was set up to make private property despot-and-revolution-resistant, and the smart money knows it.

The world is heading into a major demographic shift that is going to hit everybody's social model like a brick through a plate glass window- too many pensioners and not enough taxpayers, and no one has built the roomba that cooks and cleans for grandma yet. We will get to watch a preview in China and Russia quite soon. The pitchforks are going to come out again, and politicians will blow with the wind.

But if you own land/stuff in America, you will still own land/stuff in America.

I'm not saying it is right, or just. It is simply some useful perspective on what such an awkward, irritating, distributed, recursive system might have been designed for, because it certainly wasn't designed for speed.

The term "storm canvas" comes to mind, and with it a reminder to keep an eye to windward.

This is such a non sequitur argument lol

The U.S. spends a tremendous amount of its energy on paranoia, checks and balances, and being remarkably resistant to large-scale changes of the status quo, particularly with respect to rights attendant to private property.

I don't know one single government that is in favor of upending property rights, the exception being newborn Communist nations. Those same communist nations, after the Vanguard die out, stop changes to property rights. The US isn't different from other nations. Even China (today) is resistant to changes to the property rights structure.

In the current period of bullet trains, wind farms, and unisex bathrooms, it is incredibly inconvenient, even dangerous in its own right. It looks like an operating system bug, but only because it is holding up a feature that the real owners of America don't like advertised.

What does this mean? Like, what is the point here? The US is currently reinventing their electrical grid, reshoring manufacturing, and is investing record amounts of money in itself to do so. The US carbon emissions have already peaked and they are slowly declining every year.

There is a reason the dollar is still the global reserve currency- because the entire system was set up to make private property despot-and-revolution-resistant, and the smart money knows it.

Again, totally random argument you just tossed in here. The US dollar is the reserve currency because every other currency is not as appealing. Case in point: we increase the interest rate as global inflation sets in and all other nations' currencies immediately depreciate against the dollar. China has to have currency exchange controls because people would so prefer to hold USD.

The world is heading into a major demographic shift that is going to hit everybody's social model like a brick through a plate glass window- too many pensioners and not enough taxpayers, and no one has built the roomba that cooks and cleans for grandma yet. We will get to watch a preview in China and Russia quite soon. The pitchforks are going to come out again, and politicians will blow with the wind.

Where do you come up with this stuff? This is some straight up fox news replacement BS. The US is 15% immigrants and is one of the only developed nations to have a relatively healthy population pyramid. If anything, this argument you've made is actually PRO America, ANTI rest of the world.

But if you own land/stuff in America, you will still own land/stuff in America. I'm not saying it is right, or just.   It is simply some useful perspective on what such an awkward, irritating, distributed, recursive system might have been designed for, because it certainly wasn't designed for speed.

The CCP owns all Chinese property and no one can take it from them. The German government cannot expropriate property. Filipinos, Malaysians, Columbians, Egyptians, Norwegians, South Koreans... they are entitled to property rights.

Property rights are not uniquely American and it's weird you think property rights are what makes America uniquely bad.

There won't be any previews in Russia.

Just for curiosity's sake, if it was the middle of the night and someone started pounding on your front door and yelling, then tried to kick your door in, then broke your window, reached in and started trying to unlock your door from the inside, what's the civilized non-American response to that?

You engage them in conversion, explain to them simply they are at the wrong house, and keep pushing that point

Source: I had this situation happen to me at uni, explained to the side he had the wrong house, showed him the house number, and he calmly left.

Cool, cool. Now, what if the intruder isn't a drunk college kid but someone looking to do you harm? You open the door, he pushes inside because he already knew that he wanted to do harm to the people inaide this house number, and then what?

Not everyone is a drunk kid.

Phone the police, and then shout back asking what he wanted.

What's the average police response time in your area? Is it less than 30 seconds? Because that's how long it would be until dude is physically in your home.

wow, you're so afraid of people

Literally from the article:

While the woman was on the phone with police, Donofrio broke a glass window on the front door "and reached inside to manipulate the doorknob"

Well, maybe they handle mental illness better where you are (seriously, I bet they do). But here, we let them walk around untill they kill someone. So that is who you are protecting yourself from. And there are a lot of them just waiting to snap.

my husband is mentally ill and you have no idea how offensive you are.

I like your implication, here, that all mentally ill people are the same

In response to the comment that says mentally ill people walk around until they kill someone

There are all sorts of mentally ill people. I am referring to the ones who get arrested for violence and released over and over... not all mentally ill people.

1 more...
1 more...
  1. Talk to the person
  2. Call the police and tell the person the police is coming
  3. Block the person from coming in
  4. If he comes in anyway use tools like baseball bat, hammer or kitchen knife to defend yourself

You can bang on a reinforced steel door all you want until the police comes.

Did no one read the article?

He smashed the window and began undoing the lock from the inside

No one ever reads the article. What do we want, context?

I'm not gonna call it the world's best home defense shooting, but I'm not gonna call it some kind of injustice.

There are no windows in a steel door.

Reading comprehension is hard

While the woman was on the phone with police, Donofrio broke a glass window on the front door "and reached inside to manipulate the doorknob"

You dumb?

Don't cry to me because you didn't read the article lol

Ook lol. Thread following skills - 0.

Lmao don't cry it's not my fault you didn't read the article

And it's not my fault that you can't follow the thread of more than one comment.

I love how everyone downvoted you yet you think I'm the one who messed up

Here's the quote again, taken directly from the article. Try reading slower if you're having trouble 👍

While the woman was on the phone with police, Donofrio broke a glass window on the front door

Which means... drumroll please... there's a window in the door. I'm really glad I could hold your hand through this experience. Tomorrow we'll work on tying your shoelaces because you're a big boy now 😉

3 more...
3 more...
3 more...
3 more...
3 more...
3 more...
3 more...
3 more...
3 more...
3 more...
4 more...

Amd we love not having you, too many imigrants already. If its so bad, why people keep trying to get in?

We love not having you

We hate having these garbage laws to protect rooty tooty point and shooty more than our actual citizens

Personal accountability. Don't enter a mental state where you can't identify your own house.

Should I just allow someone to kick my door in?

"banged and kicked on the door" ≠ "kick door in"

He was drunk and frustrated. He was likely kicking the base of the door trying to be loud enough to wake a roommate to open the door since he couldn't get his key to work and was confused. Castle doctrine should not have applied here as he was likely not an obvious threat. The shooter could probably have talked with him through the door or, heaven forbid, actually opened the door and talked with him to figure out what was going on and helped the obviously inebriated young man home.

Castle doctrine is intended for when someone is making an obvious threat with deadly intent. The way it is being implemented here you can shoot a proselytizing baptist dead on your porch because they were there to attack your soul.

He did more than make noise:

While the woman was on the phone with police, Donofrio broke a glass window on the front door "and reached inside to manipulate the doorknob," at which point the male resident fired the shot through the broken window

Regardless of what you think about gun laws, I think the resident had good reason to be concerned for his safety.

Yes, my only issue is what lead up to this point. Once he broke the glass, maybe I can see it being justified. But did he call the police? Did he actually talk to the guy or stand inside and ready himself to shoot him? Was there a non-lethal option? Could he have broken his wrist by pistol-whipping?

Regardless of your stance on fun laws, I am sure we can agree that there have been far too many people shot through a front door this year to be comfortable. There was the girl who was selling Girl Scout cookies, the woman who was trying to deal with a neighbor who had violently assaulted her children with malice and a weapon, the guy who was lost and stopped to ask for directions. The list goes on. This country is founded on the idea that you can walk up to someone's front door and knock on it. Barring posted signage to the contrary, it is a universal right of anyone to be able to walk up a driveway and knock on the door without fear of reprisal. Castle doctrine has been getting applied too broadly in recent years and needs to be reigned in. It needs to have reasonableness applied as to it being a last resort. It should also not extend beyond the castle walls. There were many reasonable actions that could have been taken in this case that obviously were not. A non-lethal shot? Hell, even a warning shot would have likely been enough to warn a drunk off. I am not saying that this is murder, or even manslaughter, but a life was unnecessarily snuffed out. This needs to be something. This idea that you can shoot someone on your front porch is reprehensible.

1 more...
1 more...

heaven forbid, actually opened the door and talked with him to figure out what was going on

Problem is, if he is trying to hurt you, you've just given him access to do so easily so that you can "make sure" he actually wanted to hurt you. And maybe you have the privelege to do dangerous shit like that, maybe you're 7'8" 300lbs and have adamantium bones, but some of us do not. Some of us are 5'6" 150lbs soaking wet, some of us are women, some of us are handicapable, not all of us are as priveleged as you to be able to fight off 1-5 guys with unknown weapons (even just knives) singlehandedly so they can brag about it, personally I'm incapable of doing that and I don't want to put myself in harms way simply because the guy breaking into my house might have the wrong house or might want to rape and murder me in quiet seclusion.

1 more...

Where the fuck were his friends? Sounds like he was blackout drunk. No one was sober enough to look out for him?

Folks, if you friend gets this smashed, don't let them wander off by themselves. All manner of bad could happen. Simply falling in a bad enough spot may be enough. People have been known to drown in their own vomit.

If we did a better job of looking out for each other, it wouldn't come to these shitty situations in the first place.

Regardless of how drunk you are, you should not get shot for a silly mistake which endangered no one. Gun laws and this obsession of defending private property in ALL cases is simply stupid. Losing your life because you got drunk is stupid

It wasn't a "silly" mistake.

I've been drunk plenty of times, but I've never smashed through a window and reached through broken glass to try to open a locked door. Most drunk people know better than to literally break into a house.

You're different than other people? I thought we were all the same.

Most people are just like me. A few make drastically different choices.

Do you routinely physically break open doors when you're drunk?

4 more...
4 more...

No, but shooting them is an extreme reaction. I'm a woman alone. If this would have happened to me, I'd have barricaded the door, fled to another part of the house (there's more than one door in), put more barricades in between us and made absolutely sure I screamed the neighbourhood awake. Once there's more people to subdue him, the main problem is solved. Damages are to be covered by insurance. Now if he carried a gun, that's an entirely different matter. Still, I don't own a gun, never will, don't think I'll ever need one. Once a culture sees "shooting someone" as a first solution, things are down the drain imho.

So rely on other people to help. Ever hear of the story of Kitty Genovese? Dozens of people either saw her getting stabbed or heard her screams and nobody intervened or called the cops. Thanks, but no thanks.

They were already on the phone with cops. I'm just buying time until they arrive. And he's a drunk, as far as we know not a murderer. My first instinct is not to kill anybody who has a slightly bad day.

Fight or flight. Some people run while others don't. You can run all you want and assume they are drunks I have seen the darker side of humanity and will not assume the person doesn't mean harm. Hindsight it's easy to say oh he was just a drunk having a bad day. But when it's 2am and they break a window to open the door, my first thought isn't "this guy must be drunk"

Responsibility here would be being charged with murder and serving time

For defending yourself against someone who is physically breaking your door open at 2 in the morning?

What was the threat against his life?

Someone breaking into your house? You have no idea what kind of weapon (including a gun themselves) someone who is physically breaking into your house has.

Then why are you firing on them if you have a gun and you haven't taken other steps to protect yourself. Blind firing is not self defense its irresponsible and caused the death of an innocent kid

4 more...
4 more...
19 more...

Exactly-- no one wants to take responsibility for themselves anymore, and then has the nerve to complain when they are justifiably executed on the spot. Maybe you won't have that last beer next time

"justifiably executed". Jesus Christ man how psychotic are you?? Terrifying

You wanna know what's REALLY justifiable, buddy? Not reading the obvious sarcasm in phrases like "executed on the spot" because the US gun culture is deranged

Every country other than the US has wild break-in issues with fatal robberies happening 24/7 because they don't have guns.

2 more...
26 more...
27 more...
27 more...
35 more...