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Stand Your Ground Laws say people can defend themselves using force, even deadly force, in any public place where they have a right to be. When they passed more than a decade ago, proponents promised we’d be safer from crime -- especially violence and murder.
Dr. John Roman, a senior researcher at NORC-University of Chicago, tells us what the facts actually show.
Find more at criminalinjusticepodcast.com.
By David Harris4.4
285285 ratings
Stand Your Ground Laws say people can defend themselves using force, even deadly force, in any public place where they have a right to be. When they passed more than a decade ago, proponents promised we’d be safer from crime -- especially violence and murder.
Dr. John Roman, a senior researcher at NORC-University of Chicago, tells us what the facts actually show.
Find more at criminalinjusticepodcast.com.