Why Was Marissa Alexander Not Allowed To Stand Her Ground?
Marissa Alexander has three children, including an infant who was born 9 days before her mother was attacked.
In August 2010, Marissa Alexander found herself in what she believed was
a life or death situation. While she was using the bathroom in her
Jacksonville, Florida home, her husband allegedly attacked her.
He assaulted her, shoving, strangling and holding her against her will,
preventing her from fleeing, while she begged him for mercy. After a
minute or two of trying to escape, she got free and went to the garage
where her truck was parked, but realized that she didn’t have her keys.
After her attempts to open the garage door failed, she grabbed her
weapon, and went back inside her home, hoping to either leave through
another exit or get her cell phone. But when she got to the kitchen, her
husband approached and threatened her. Yelling “Bitch, I will kill
you!” he charged toward her. Afraid and desperate, she lifted the weapon
that was in her right hand, turned away and discharged a single shot up
in the air, in the ceiling.
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Alexander may have saved her life that day and no one was hurt when she
fired the warning shot. But the incident could soon cost her up to 25
years in prison. After she fired her gun, her husband ran out of the
home, contacted the police and reported that she shot at him and his
sons. Police arrested her; prosecutors tried her — and though she
claimed self-defense under Florida’s Stand Your Ground law — a jury
convicted her of three counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon
with no intent to harm. She has been in jail for a year and is now
waiting for a judge to issue her sentence. The prosecutor in her case?
None other than special prosecutor Angela Corey, who is leading the
prosecution of George Zimmerman, who claims he shot African-American
teen Trayvon Martin in self-defense.
I have not vetted Alexander’s story and — while a local alternative weekly newspaper, the Folio Weekly, maybe investigating
her story — it appears that no local media organizations have vetted it
either. So there is no way to ascertain her husband’s name or his side
of the story. But if there’s any merit to the account of events
circulating around the Internet — through a letter she wrote with her previous husband and friend, Lincoln Alexander, and through an interview that her relatives gave on The Nancy Lockhart Show – someone has some explaining to do.
Florida’s Stand Your Ground Law allows
victims to pull the trigger on aggressors when they “reasonably
believe” doing so is necessary to stop the other person from hurting
them. It obviates their duty to retreat. Yet the judge who heard
Alexander’s case at an evidentiary hearing said she “could have exited
the house thru the master bedroom window, front door, and/or sliding
glass back door,” according to Alexander’s letter. And a jury somehow
agreed that Alexander’s discharge of her firearm was not justifiable.
On the Nancy Lockhart Show, Lincoln Alexander said that the family plans
to appeal his ex-wife’s case. They are also planning a press conference
for 3 pm Wednesday.
As soon as I learn more details about the husband’s side of the story, I’ll report it.
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