DevilsAdvocate
Philosopher
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2004
- Messages
- 7,686
The prosecution pretty much demolished her. He’s good.
Guyger’s responses, especially up to the point where she started crying near the end of the direct examination, seemed overly practiced. She did not come across as credible. Even after that she still seemed to repeatedly use certain key words like “threat” and “silhouette” even were they weren’t really appropriate.
The prosecutor caught her out on one of those that I think is important. Her attorney asked her when she was at the door with the door slightly ajar and heard rustling noises, what was she looking for. Her answer was that she “wanted just to find that threat.”
If the castle law does not apply, she can only use deadly force if she had a reasonable belief that she was facing a deadly threat and that deadly force was immediately necessary. But she had already decided that there was a threat before she opened the door. It seems that she even decided that it was a deadly threat, because her immediate action was to pull out her gun.
Under cross examination, she says that options like taking cover or calling for help did not occur to her. Despite her training to take cover, and despite having a direct radio to police who were just blocks away and could be there in seconds, and despite the potential danger to herself. It never even occurred to her.
The only thing that occurred to her was to pull out her gun and go into the door. To find the threat. The deadly threat that she already believed was there. She didn’t even turn on the light switch that was mere inches from her hand. She went directly for the gun. The gun was more important than the lights. To me, those actions indicate that she wasn’t going in to find a threat, but going in to shoot a threat.
She said she didn’t follow police procedures because she wasn’t responding to a call. When asked directly why she didn’t consider options like taking cover instead of going into the apartment, she said, “I was at my home.”
She went straight for her gun and opened the door. She didn’t consider any other option because “I was at home.”
Guyger surely knows Texas has the castle law. She knows the law. She’s trained in use of deadly force and when it is allowed.
From her testimony, it is starting to sound like she didn’t consider any other option because she knew under the castle law, she could just go in with her gun blazing. And it is starting to sound like that is what she did.
Guyger’s responses, especially up to the point where she started crying near the end of the direct examination, seemed overly practiced. She did not come across as credible. Even after that she still seemed to repeatedly use certain key words like “threat” and “silhouette” even were they weren’t really appropriate.
The prosecutor caught her out on one of those that I think is important. Her attorney asked her when she was at the door with the door slightly ajar and heard rustling noises, what was she looking for. Her answer was that she “wanted just to find that threat.”
If the castle law does not apply, she can only use deadly force if she had a reasonable belief that she was facing a deadly threat and that deadly force was immediately necessary. But she had already decided that there was a threat before she opened the door. It seems that she even decided that it was a deadly threat, because her immediate action was to pull out her gun.
Under cross examination, she says that options like taking cover or calling for help did not occur to her. Despite her training to take cover, and despite having a direct radio to police who were just blocks away and could be there in seconds, and despite the potential danger to herself. It never even occurred to her.
The only thing that occurred to her was to pull out her gun and go into the door. To find the threat. The deadly threat that she already believed was there. She didn’t even turn on the light switch that was mere inches from her hand. She went directly for the gun. The gun was more important than the lights. To me, those actions indicate that she wasn’t going in to find a threat, but going in to shoot a threat.
She said she didn’t follow police procedures because she wasn’t responding to a call. When asked directly why she didn’t consider options like taking cover instead of going into the apartment, she said, “I was at my home.”
She went straight for her gun and opened the door. She didn’t consider any other option because “I was at home.”
Guyger surely knows Texas has the castle law. She knows the law. She’s trained in use of deadly force and when it is allowed.
From her testimony, it is starting to sound like she didn’t consider any other option because she knew under the castle law, she could just go in with her gun blazing. And it is starting to sound like that is what she did.