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 May 15, 2011 in 

In a great and rare example of real judicial activism, the Indiana Supreme Court has, without even being asked, outlawed something that hundreds of years of common law have allowed and the Indiana Legislature has explicitly authorized.

And the law of England has so particular and tender a regard to the immunity of a man’s house, that it stiles it his castle, and will never suffer it to be violated with immunity: agreeing herein with the sentiments of ancient Rome, as expressed in the works of Tully; “quid enim sanctius, quid omni religione munitius, quam domus unusquisque civium?” [What more sacred, what more strongly guarded by every holy feeling, than a man’s own home?]

Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765-69).

The poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the Crown. It may be frail; its roof may shake; the wind may blow through it; the storm may enter; the rain may enter; but the King of England cannot enter – all his force dares not cross the threshold of the ruined tenement!

William Pitt the Elder (1708-1778).

(b) A person:
(1) is justified in using reasonable force, including deadly force, against another person; and
(2) does not have a duty to retreat;
if the person reasonably believes that the force is necessary to prevent or terminate the other person’s unlawful entry of or attack on the person’s dwelling, curtilage, or occupied motor vehicle.

Indiana Code 35-41-3-2.

Now this Court is faced for the first time with the question of whether Indiana should recognize the common-law right to reasonably resist unlawful entry by police officers. We conclude that public policy disfavors any such right.

Indiana Supreme Court, Barnes v. State (h/t Simple Justice).

At issue in this case is not whether Barnes had the right to resist unlawful police entry into his home – a proposition that the State does not even contest – but rather whether the entry was illegal in the first place, and if so, whether and to what extent Barnes could resist entry without committing a battery upon the officer. Federal Fourth Amendment jurisprudence is equal to the task of resolving these issues.2    In my view the majority sweeps with far too broad a brush by essentially telling Indiana citizens that government agents may now enter their homes illegally – that is, without the necessity of a warrant, consent, or exigent circumstances. And that their sole remedy is to seek refuge in the civil arena. I disagree and therefore respectfully dissent.

Rucker, J., dissenting in Barnes v. State (emphasis added).

So in Indiana, a person is justified in using deadly force against another if necessary to keep him from unlawfully entering the person’s home or curtilage…unless the other person is a cop. Cops can enter Indiana citizens’ homes illegally, and the citizens cannot use any force to stop them.

With this opinion the Indiana Supreme Court abrogates Section 35-41-3-2 (not only sua sponte but also implicitly, without mentioning that statute) in part because of its aversion to violence: “We also find that allowing resistance unnecessarily escalates the level of violence and therefore the risk of injuries to all parties involved without preventing the arrest—as evident by the facts of this instant case.” (Note that the court, without analysis, conflates “unlawful arrests,” which citizens may not use force to resist, with “unlawful entry,” which citizens have historically—and in Indiana by statute—been able lawfully to forcibly resist.)

Violence is deprecated in modern society, and rightly so: there are better solutions to most modern problems. But reasonable people agree, and the law reflects, that there are some problems to which violence, and even extreme violence—deadly force—is an appropriate solution: it’s why the police carry guns; it’s why we have armies; and it’s why it’s lawful for individuals to use violence among themselves when it is necessary to protect their property, when they or others are threatened with imminent harm, and—except in Indiana—when they need to keep intruders out of their homes. When seconds count, the police are only minutes away; the availability of violence in these situations makes the good guys safer and the bad guys (including the bad cops, and the bad guys who dress up like cops) a little bit more honest.

The rejection of violence for the sake of rejecting violence is a decidedly leftist hippie pacifist stance for a court to take; the protection of the boys in blue from any resistance by the citizenry is a right-wing position. If you go far enough to the right you wind up on the left; all flavors of totalitarianism favor forcing people to trust and rely on the government to protect them, even from the government.

With the breaching of castle doors, Indiana is one big step closer to tyranny.

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7 Comments

  1. | Popehat May 16, 2011 at 9:34 am - Reply

    […] = {"data_track_clickback":true};MARK BENNETT: Indiana cops get the keys to the castle. Your castle. This won’t happen too often in places like Williams Creek or Golden Hill, Indianapolis. Home […]

  2. Gregory B. Jones May 16, 2011 at 1:43 pm - Reply

    Michigan, where I practice, also holds that there is no right to resist, and that it is therefore a crime to resist, the illegal activities of the police. While it hasn’t arisen in the context of unlawful police entry into the home, so far as I am aware, it is a logical consequence of that reasoning to hold that there would be no right to resist illegal police entry into the home.

    • Mark Bennett May 16, 2011 at 5:47 pm - Reply

      An illegal entry into my home (where I have my dogs, and my family, and my personal effects) is a different sort of violation than an illegal arrest of me on the street; applying the rule to the former is in no way a logical consequence of applying it to the latter.

  3. Michael Stuart May 16, 2011 at 5:10 pm - Reply

    But Mark, you ignore the paramount issue: officer safety
    If a few Mundanes have to be illegally brutalized in their own homes, so be it; for that is far preferable to allowing any of the Exalted Ones to be harmed.

  4. Glenn_G May 19, 2011 at 3:51 pm - Reply

    So what happens in this instance if the Officer is actually committing a violent crime against the homeowner? Would they still be in the wrong to attempt to thwart such an entry?

    I know, I know, it is sooo rare to see a bad cop.. (pause for laughter), that the situation would never arise for a citizen to be placed into the position to defend him/her self against an officer that might be gaining entry to complete a violent crime.

    Did the courts rule on this sort of item, or is it blanket, no resist?

    • Mark Bennett May 19, 2011 at 3:59 pm - Reply

      You can find the answer to your question in decision (to which I thought I had linked).

      I think the answer is “blanket, no resist.” Even if the cop is entering your house with obvious bad intent and illegality, you must not resist.

  5. Mark Kernich May 20, 2011 at 2:06 am - Reply

    That being so, makes me glad I’m a neo leftie anarcho hippy. In my jurisdiction we only recently explicitly (case law) recognised the right to use upto deadly force (if it is proportionate, etc) in the defence of the castle gate. And yes, left blends to right at the edges on the extreme.

    Of course, in aussie, no right to bear arms, in fact no constitutionally guaranteed rights at all (except to speak politically), so we live on case law.

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