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John Harris discusses Tennessee's "castle doctrine" which is not what many people think it is. It is instead a set of conditions that under the particular facts of a specific incident address whether someone has a duty to retreat prior to resorting to deadly force. It also creates and qualifies a rebuttable presumption regarding the element of "imminent fear of death or serious bodily injury"
By C. Richard Archie5
44 ratings
John Harris discusses Tennessee's "castle doctrine" which is not what many people think it is. It is instead a set of conditions that under the particular facts of a specific incident address whether someone has a duty to retreat prior to resorting to deadly force. It also creates and qualifies a rebuttable presumption regarding the element of "imminent fear of death or serious bodily injury"