70scarrestoguy wrote:
Good afternoon Chip. "however, every indication is that the kid wasn't going for the car, but rather was attempting a home invasion".
I'd read elsewhere that the teen was attempting to break into the homeowners vehicle.
If there's evidence that the teen was attempting to burglarize the home, then I'll back Mr Landry 100% regardless of what he could've done differently.
My qualm is that a human life is far more valuable than materialistic possessions & that I can't support killing a person over things except as previously stated.
This is all speculation, so: caveat emptor. That said:
The police said that Landry shot the kid from 30 feet away. Landry approached the kid from the "front yard" (I don't totally understand what "front yard" means, looking at the one or two pictures available). The driveway itself appears to be barely 30 feet from the street gate to the back door of the home. I don't know exactly where the kid was when he sustained the gun shot, but it sure seems like he would have had to have been moving past the car and toward the back door of the home. The distances involved would seem to corroborate Landry's statement.
At this point, the primary legal question appears to be: can the state prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Coulter was NOT trying to enter Landry's dwelling, or that Landry did not have reason to believe that Coulter was attempting to enter his dwelling? Regarding the first point: we have been told that Coulter was unarmed. If he was intending something other than a home invasion, what was he doing? Was he attempting to break into the car? How was he going to do that, unarmed? The second point cannot be proven, absent some evidence yet unknown. Coulter had scaled an 8-foot fence at 2:00 in the morning. He wasn't there selling Boy Scout popcorn, or to steal Landry's daughter's Big Wheel from the driveway.