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Self-defense is often described as a fundamental right — but in practice, it is one of the most misunderstood and narrowly defined concepts in criminal law.
In this episode of Closing Arguments, Indianapolis attorney Jack Razumich takes a deep dive into the law of self-defense in Indiana, examining how doctrines like Stand Your Ground, Castle Doctrine, and no duty to retreat actually function inside a courtroom — not just in theory, but in real cases with real consequences.
The discussion begins by breaking down the legal foundations of self-defense: what the law requires, how “reasonable force” is evaluated, and why a claim of justification does not guarantee immunity from prosecution.
From there, the episode analyzes two recent Indiana cases with starkly different outcomes:
Why was one case charged as manslaughter and the other as murder? What role did context, perceived threat, proportional force, and decision-making play in each outcome?
This episode explores where self-defense ends, where criminal liability begins, and why invoking self-defense is often far more complex — and far riskier — than people realize.
Chapters:
0:00 - Introduction
2:40 - The law of self-defense in Indiana
7:54 - "Standing your ground" and the "castle doctrine"
15:58 - State of Indiana v. Curt Andersen
22:21 - Andersen's argument and claim of self-defense
28:47 - The law doesn't recommend warning shots
34:41 - The claims made in State of Indiana v. Maclean Murt
42:49 - Making critical decisions in a split second
46:05 - Closing remarks
By John Razumich5
11 ratings
Self-defense is often described as a fundamental right — but in practice, it is one of the most misunderstood and narrowly defined concepts in criminal law.
In this episode of Closing Arguments, Indianapolis attorney Jack Razumich takes a deep dive into the law of self-defense in Indiana, examining how doctrines like Stand Your Ground, Castle Doctrine, and no duty to retreat actually function inside a courtroom — not just in theory, but in real cases with real consequences.
The discussion begins by breaking down the legal foundations of self-defense: what the law requires, how “reasonable force” is evaluated, and why a claim of justification does not guarantee immunity from prosecution.
From there, the episode analyzes two recent Indiana cases with starkly different outcomes:
Why was one case charged as manslaughter and the other as murder? What role did context, perceived threat, proportional force, and decision-making play in each outcome?
This episode explores where self-defense ends, where criminal liability begins, and why invoking self-defense is often far more complex — and far riskier — than people realize.
Chapters:
0:00 - Introduction
2:40 - The law of self-defense in Indiana
7:54 - "Standing your ground" and the "castle doctrine"
15:58 - State of Indiana v. Curt Andersen
22:21 - Andersen's argument and claim of self-defense
28:47 - The law doesn't recommend warning shots
34:41 - The claims made in State of Indiana v. Maclean Murt
42:49 - Making critical decisions in a split second
46:05 - Closing remarks