In order for a self-defense claim to be legitimate you would have to be in imminent threat of death or great bodily harm. A battered woman would have to have the state of mind that her life is in danger or that she will be seriously physically injured unless she shoots and defends herself. Those questions by the prosecutor are appropriate imo. I think the state did a good job of not getting into the weeds with the defendant because there’s enough there that she may have been emotionally or psychologically in a controlling relationship. Just the fact that she was 24 and he had 30 years on her is enough for a controlling dynamic for me. And they don’t want to alienate any female jurors esp by pretending like that’s not a thing.
HOWEVER, emotional or psych abuse is not a justification for killing someone.
JMO
Thanks for this detailed explanation.
I wonder whether there's also an expectation to make a case for significant duration of abusive treatment in an affirmative defense of coercive control / pysch / other abuse (though note that I don't think AB is making such a case). Enduring years and years of such treatment >>> to breaking point might make more sense to a jury than what seemed to be an on/off relationship where parties barely cohabited for a year or so.
I also wonder about the strategy of AB's team to make causal connections between maltreatment and outright abuse of animals and a threat to life for AB. It seems clear that DB had real anger issues, abused family pets and ought to have been brought to justice for that alone. He may also have harassed and even stalked AB. This is certainly dangerous and perhaps criminal behaviour. Does it amount to a preponderance of evidence for a battered woman / DV defense? All kinds of precedents for Yea and Nay here, but I'm thinking specifically of the Suzanne Morphew trial in which evidence of long-term coercive control and instances of physical abuse committed (and admitted to) by her accused husband were ruled out by the judge. Again, not taking a position here but wondering how the jury might look at the allegations within the timeframe of the AB/ DB relationship.
I'm gliding over the alleged events of the day of the shooting because, honestly, I find them difficult to organize into any coherent sequence -- especially with oddball details like DB's alleged assaults via moving boxes, Enter the Dragon fighting posture, etc. This sounds as fanciful to me as the remote poisoning scenarios, albeit a bit more inventive than the expected (and unproven) allegations of various assaults on the 11-month old.
This was clearly a toxic, risky and doomed relationship between two people who should never have been together (or, arguably, with anyone at all). Was it a justified shooting, and should AB get off?
No, and no, IMO -- but a jury might not agree.