Court upholds right of armed citizen to shoot a police officer in self-defense

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Suck My Glock

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As long as it is not obvious that they are police, that is.

https://www.ammoland.com/2020/04/court-upholds-right-of-armed-citizen-to-shoot-a-police-officer-in-defense/#axzz6KCnu3Scg

Read more: https://www.ammoland.com/2020/04/court-upholds-right-of-armed-citizen-to-shoot-a-police-officer-in-defense/#ixzz6KIrIKi1e

On 20 August 2015, in Brevard County, Florida, John DeRossett, 55, shot and severely wounded a Brevard County sheriff's deputy.

The agent was part of a sting operation, who were attempting to arrest DeRossett's niece, Mary Ellis, for prostitution. They had set up a controlled environment at a motel, but Mary Ellis did not show up. From floridatoday.com:

Brevard County agents set up a prostitution sting on Aug. 20, 2015, arranging to meet DeRossett's niece, Mary Ellis, at a motel where a controlled environment had been set up to conduct an arrest.

When she didn't show, the three deputies in plain clothes went to her Covina Street home in Port St. John, where Agent Peter Stead grabbed Ellis from the doorway while John “Casey” Smith and Jason Roberts hid in the darkened yard.

During their testimony at the immunity hearing, the deputies said it was unusual to go to a suspect's home for a sting operation when a controlled environment had already been established.

When she was grabbed, Ellis began screaming for help from her uncle, who was in a back room eating at the time, according to court records.

There was strong evidence DeRossett did not know the men accosting his niece were deputies. None of the deputies were in uniform. His statements, immediately after the event, and in the hospital, were all consistent with the belief that unknown men were attempting to kidnap his niece. He knew his niece had problems with drugs and prostitution.

DeRossett was retired. He had a concealed carry permit. He had no criminal record. He had taken his niece into his home as a favor to his sister. From the petition to the Fifth Circuit:

Petitioner, John DeRossett, a sixty-five-year-old retired General Motors autoworker, owned a home in Brevard County, Florida. Derossett’s adult niece, Mary Ellis, lived with him in this home. Derossett had no criminal record, worked part-time as a security guard at Port Canaveral, and lawfully possessed a concealed weapons permit. He had also apparently taken a firearms training course.

On August 20, 2015, at approximately 9:30 p.m., Ellis answered a knock on the front door. As she opened the door, a man reached inside the threshold of the house, grabbed her arm, and began pulling Ellis out of the home and onto the covered front porch. Ellis struggled to resist her apparent abduction and screamed to her uncle (DeRossett) that she needed help. At this point, two other men approached to physically assist the first man in pulling Ellis off the porch of the home and into the front yard.

John DeRossett was in a backroom, eating, when he heard her screams. It was dark outside the home.

The first shot was when DeRossett fired a “warning shot” into the air. The men who had accosted his niece (the deputies) then fired at him, without identifying themselves. A firefight ensued. One deputy, John “Casey” Smith, was severely wounded. More than 40 shots were fired. Both John DeRossett and his Niece were wounded, but less severely.

The homeowner, DeRossett, was charged with three counts of attempted murder of a police officer.

Police claimed they told the niece they were police officers as they grabbed her. She called 911 during or immediately after the firefight, and told the dispatcher she did not know who the men who grabbed her were.

The deputies had no warrant to arrest Mary Ellis.

Criminals often claim to be police to attempt to get compliance. The deputies never told DeRossett they were police.

Why would he be under obligation to believe them, unless they presented credentials or other convincing proof they were operating under lawful authority?

DeRossett was held in jail for nearly five years.

In August of 2018, at trial, his lawyer presented the defense that he was protected by the “Stand Your Ground” law. The local court found against him, saying that he knew, or should have known, the people he was shooting at were law enforcement officers.

He appealed to the federal Fifth Circuit Court of appeals in 2019.

The appeals court found the local court had incorrectly made the determination DeRossett should have known the men attacking his niece, and him, were police officers. The Fifth Circuit sent the case back to the local court, to determine if a different exception to Stand your Ground applied. The Stand Your Ground law would not apply if he was “furthering criminal activities” when the action took place.

The local court found against him again. This time, the court claimed the Stand Your Ground law did not apply, because he knew his niece had used her bedroom to conduct prostitution.

DeRossett appealed to the Fifth Circuit again.

He stayed in jail until March of 2020, when he was allowed to bond out.

On 15 April, the Fifth District Court of appeals dismissed the charges against him. They ruled that mere knowledge that criminal activities, such as prostitution, had occurred, is not “furthering criminal activities”. From clickorlando.com:

VIERA, Fla. – Citing the Stand Your Ground law, the Fifth District Court of Appeals dismissed the longstanding charges against a Port St. John man accused of shooting a Brevard County Sheriff’s deputy during a botched arrest in front of his home in 2015.

John DeRossett spent nearly five years in jail, for defending his niece against attackers who did not identify themselves as police.

John DeRossett is a free man today. He is alive. There was a time, when many assumed anyone, justified or not, who shot a police officer, would be killed by police. That is not true. It is less true today than it used to be.

In Houston, police officers have been charged with felony murder in the deaths of an innocent couple. The husband dared to protect his wife and dog against an unannounced home invasion. The couple were killed, but the officers are being held accountable.

Mistakes occur. Error is piled onto error. The world is not perfect.

Why, with the evidence, which was plain from the start, was John DeRossett locked up for nearly five years, when he was a homeowner, retired, who had no previous criminal record?

Will there be a civil suit against Brevard County?

The agents of the government are not supposed to be our masters. They are supposed to be our servants.

When agents of the government act as criminals, they should not be surprised when citizens treat them as criminals. When they disregard due process, they should lose immunity for their actions.

The case shows why the Stand Your Ground law was needed. Warrants are not only to protect the accused. Properly used, they also protect police. If the officer had a warrant, had knocked on the door and presented it, it is highly likely he would not have been shot.
 
"Criminals often claim to be police to attempt to get compliance. The deputies never told DeRossett they were police.

When agents of the government act as criminals, they should not be surprised when citizens treat them as criminals. When they disregard due process, they should lose immunity for their actions.

The case shows why the Stand Your Ground law was needed. Warrants are not only to protect the accused. Properly used, they also protect police. If the officer had a warrant, had knocked on the door and presented it, it is highly likely he would not have been shot."

------------------------

The above quotes, say it all for me,... as well as, the results of this atrocious court action, give food for thought, imo.
 
smithers599 said:
He spent five years in prison waiting for vindication. Some victory.

Yeah, and I'm sure he's lost everything he had in the meantime. Hearing stories like this make me a little ill. I can't stand the injustice.
 
I would suspect and hope a massive won law suit will at least help replace some of everything he lost to the gestapo actions
 
GunNut said:
I would suspect and hope a massive won law suit will at least help replace some of everything he lost to the gestapo actions

Hopefully, but it will never help explaining it to a new employer, creditor, hell even a date. They could care less if you are found not guilty. That jail time will follow him around for life. His life is ruined.

Anyone who supports "thin blue line" is an enemy as far as I'm concerned. I have yet to meet a cop that hasn't been a total richard, thinking they were above us peasants. I have guys I served honorably with in Afghanistan that I wouldn't glance twice at now that they are cops. Absolute power corrupts absolute....
 
In plan close, didn't identify themselves, no arrest warrant and grabbed the niece. As far as he knew his niece was being attacked. He reacted the right way. There shouldn't have been any jail time. Simple case of protect a family member. I'll bet that the officers involved were not reprimand for not following protocol.
 
Az desert rat 1 said:
In plan close, didn't identify themselves, no arrest warrant and grabbed the niece. As far as he knew his niece was being attacked. He reacted the right way. There shouldn't have been any jail time. Simple case of protect a family member. I'll bet that the officers involved were not reprimand for not following protocol.

Pretty much my definition of someone that needs shooten.
 
The problem is that when a cop does a bad thing, they circle their wagons and protect them rather than rolling them under the bus. They make every excuse in the book about why he was justified or they take days or weeks to arrest em when they obviously should of done it immediately. Then if they get convicted, they get the lenient sentence. What they should be doing is casting out the bad apples and showing the people it's not a good ol boy system. I understand it's a tough job, my little brother is a Phoenix cop, but it's also a voluntary job. They shouldnt have special protections. If anything they should actually be held to a higher standard rather than a lower one.
 
Kind of like the SWAT guy who shot and killed an innocent man in a Motel a couple of years back. Found not guilty, but fired.

Wow
 
62Grains said:
The problem is that when a cop does a bad thing, they circle their wagons and protect them rather than rolling them under the bus. They make every excuse in the book about why he was justified or they take days or weeks to arrest em when they obviously should of done it immediately. Then if they get convicted, they get the lenient sentence. What they should be doing is casting out the bad apples and showing the people it's not a good ol boy system. I understand it's a tough job, my little brother is a Phoenix cop, but it's also a voluntary job. They shouldnt have special protections. If anything they should actually be held to a higher standard rather than a lower one.

My sentiments exactly. I'm not anti cop. I love good police officers, they are just as critical as any other service.

Like you said. Hate when they excuse the gross actions of psychopaths in their ranks and the good ones who are whistleblowers get fired.
 
shooter444 said:
"Criminals often claim to be police to attempt to get compliance. The deputies never told DeRossett they were police.

When agents of the government act as criminals, they should not be surprised when citizens treat them as criminals. When they disregard due process, they should lose immunity for their actions.

The case shows why the Stand Your Ground law was needed. Warrants are not only to protect the accused. Properly used, they also protect police. If the officer had a warrant, had knocked on the door and presented it, it is highly likely he would not have been shot."

------------------------

The above quotes, say it all for me,... as well as, the results of this atrocious court action, give food for thought, imo.

I love you.
 
Cubiclerevolt said:
62Grains said:
The problem is that when a cop does a bad thing, they circle their wagons and protect them rather than rolling them under the bus. They make every excuse in the book about why he was justified or they take days or weeks to arrest em when they obviously should of done it immediately. Then if they get convicted, they get the lenient sentence. What they should be doing is casting out the bad apples and showing the people it's not a good ol boy system. I understand it's a tough job, my little brother is a Phoenix cop, but it's also a voluntary job. They shouldnt have special protections. If anything they should actually be held to a higher standard rather than a lower one.

My sentiments exactly. I'm not anti cop. I love good police officers, they are just as critical as any other service.

Like you said. Hate when they excuse the gross actions of psychopaths in their ranks and the good ones who are whistleblowers get fired.

Problem is the good ones jump right in line to protect the bad ones, probably because they fear getting killed by another cop or not getting backed up in a bad situation. If a good one stands up for a bad one as far as I am concerned they are all bad and they failed their oath.

All the police shows on tv precondition us to accept police brutality. Look at the Stabler character on Law and Order and the Chicago PD one even uses black sites like they really do in Chicago. Then you hear stories in real life about things happening like on the show. On these shows look at the extremes they go to protecting their own, preconditioning at its best.

Then there are the prosecutors. They put a guy away and it gets overturned and proven beyond a doubt the person is not guilty. Then they interview the prosecutor and he still insists he is right. Cops get to lie and prosecutors mislead, if I am ever forced to sit on a jury it will be not guilty as I see both as liars.


Just the Steven Avery case where he was cleared of all charges in one case and then gets charged in another one. I believe ALL the police involved were liars and got even with him and rolled up a 18 year old semi retarded relative for spite and he got cleared as they coerced his confession. f*** the police.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Avery
 
pvreb said:
Home invaders reportedly yell "Police" when they do their thing. Who(m) are you to believe?

Happens often. A guy a few streets down from me had it happen, yelled police search warrant. Lost all of his property that evening and they were not cops. A MCSO guy I used to shoot with, not really shot with but he talked sometimes said they will not allow the news to report when it happened like that so the real cops don't get shot every time they do a entry. He used to bring other cops with him to the range and I always shot head shots at 3,5, 7 and 10 yards. One of his cops asked why I did that when center mass was easier, I replied because body armor stops here and held my hand where is stopped, that made him think.

I wouldn't be surprised if some of the home invasion crews were actually cops.
 
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