Exactly; in the last trial the burden of proof was incorrectly given to the defence. Hopefully this will not be the case in the new trial, where I would question why a new one was required in the first place under a series of laws that achieve little more than subvert the American constitution.
Before such acts were passed the judges were able to judge each case on its own circumstances. Statutes tend to be rigid and take this less into consideration.
Common law may one day be all but extinct.
I can't vouch for the accuracy of the Tampa Bay Times but here is an article of interest
http://www.tampabay.com/news/public...s-some-shocking-outcomes-depending-on/1233133
I hope no one thinks I am in the anti-Alexander camp. Quite aside from the law which does not seem to be on Ms. Alexander's side, this raises many troubling moral and cultural issues. For the moment, what IF WE IGNORED THE LAW, what might be folks moral feelings on these WHAT IF situations.
WHAT IF there were no children in the house and Gray initiated a fight and slapped and punched her several times in the Living room. Suppose she ran past the exit door, got a loaded gun, and returned in anger to the living room to scare the crap out of him with an intentional near miss. Would this be morally right or wrong of Ms. Alexander? How about if she shot him?
SUPPOSE Alexander initiated a physical fight in the same circumstances, and he got a gun and shot near her to scare the shit out of her? What if he did it to "sober her up", so as to avoid using his fists to fend her off?
SUPPOSE some rowdy and thuggish drunk men refuse to leave the front and back yards of your cabin - why can't you frighten them off with warning shots into the ground? Why would it be an "assault" to defend your property through fright?
Here is what I find troubling.
First, many or most men are larger and stronger than their female partners, so much so it you might consider a man's fists to be a "deadly weapon". A gun in a woman's hand reverses that disadvantage and using it to frighten off an impending male aggressor might be very appropriate.
Second, we are raised in an historic and a contemporary ideology of the individual right and duty to fight for "justice", for the individual to redress wrongs done to him or his family, town, etc.. And just about every Western or Gangster movie is about some individuals violently transgressing, and some individual 'doing good' by using a gun (or gun threat) to end that transgression (with or without a badge).
'Warning Shots', shots to disarm, shots to wound (rather than kill), shots to frighten off ARE ALL a part of our Western cultural lore - from the plainswoman with a shotgun in front of her cabin, to the John Wayne trail boss ...using a gun is considered a moral tool for those in the right. AND using a gun to warn is considered what 'law abiding' innocents do (as opposed to killing).
Last, our legal culture does not seem to recognize our nature. To be wrongly frightened, robbed, or attacked is deeply offensive - most people feel "raped". The desire to fight back, and seek to punish the aggressor is natural. It seems moral, to me, for anyone to seek just proportionate revenge...even violent revenge. Victims have a right to fight back.