I am not an attorney and I definitely have firm beliefs against guns. I had a family member killed from gun-related accident and a few months ago, I had a dear friend take her own life with a gun.
So, I am not the most un-biased person about guns out there.
IMO, as a Floridian, the big change to the existing self-defense law in my state with SYG is that the shooter no longer has to try to retreat -- that they can shoot to kill if they feel their life is in danger. Before, they had to attempt to flee, before shooting the perp to make it justifiable.
The shooter has always had to prove it was justifiable as a defense. SYG is not nor has ever been intended to automatically be a get out of jail free card.
I agree that it is not being applied consistently across the state and that is one of the many concerns I have with the law.
JMO.
Daisy7, I am so very sorry for your losses.
BBM: "No duty to retreat" has been the law in supposedly "liberal" California for at least 26 years. It's not quite the radical notion the media have made it seem. (It was carefully explained to my jury that people get killed trying to run away and so the law in CA does not require them to do so.)
ETA to continue the example of the murder case on which I was a juror, the killer wasn't required to retreat, but the evidence showed he went to considerable effort to (a) conceal a large and heavy knife, (b) run around a lengthy barrier headed TOWARD the victim, (c) chase down his victim and (d) continue to stab the victim long after the victim was obviously incapacitated. After a week of strenuous debate and a good deal of shouting, we finally decided those actions weren't just a matter of "standing his ground" or even "self-defense", but represented an aggressive and unjustified murder of the victim (jerk though the latter may have been).
So at least for that one jury, "no duty to retreat" did NOT mean that all aggressive actions by the defendant were thereby justified. As I said, that was 26 years ago and probably doesn't represent current California law; but my point is that "no duty to retreat" isn't necessarily the blank check the media have suggested. Not to the police and not to jurors.