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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 12:18 am 
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Attorney: Wafer wants to apologize at sentencing today for porch shooting
12:12 AM, September 3, 2014
By Elisha Anderson, Detroit Free Press Staff Writer

Theodore Wafer wants to apologize to the parents of the 19-year-old woman he fatally shot 10 months ago and plans to make a statement during his sentencing this morning.

That is what Wafer’s attorney said in a court document asking Wayne County Circuit Judge Dana Hathaway to depart downward from the sentencing guidelines of second-degree murder when she sentences the Dearborn Heights man for killing Renisha McBride.

“He wants to tell the McBride family that he is so sorry for taking their loved one’s life,” defense attorney Cheryl Carpenter said in the document. “He wishes he could have taken it all back and not opened that door. He beats himself up for opening the door.”

...more at link
http://www.freep.com/article/20140902/NEWS02/309020180

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 8:12 am 
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Wafer Sentencing Hearing will start at the top of the hour

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 10:21 am 
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Well if that was "Justice" we've had it.

Wafer got 2 yrs mandatory on weapon conviction and 15-30 on second murder and 7-15 yrs on the manslaughter. he'll serve at least 17 yrs

It seems ridiculous to me.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 10:27 am 
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I don't see how that can stand up in appeals.


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 10:49 am 
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Mung... I would not count on ANYTHING.. but I hope you are right


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Wafer atty says she will not handle his appeal, he will get a court-appointed atty who will do that

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 10:52 am 
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Rumpole wrote:
Well if that was "Justice" we've had it.

Wafer got 2 yrs mandatory on weapon conviction and 15-30 on second murder and 7-15 yrs on the manslaughter. he'll serve at least 17 yrs

It seems ridiculous to me.


Maybe I'm crazy, but I don't understand the problem?

A jury convicted him of second-degree murder, and manslaughter. The sentence seems appropriate for second-degree murder.

Now, if the issue is whether the second-degree murder *conviction* will stand up on appeal? That's anyone's guess. But if the jury rejected the self-defense claim, then at a minimum, manslaughter by act is an appropriate conviction. And from the little I know about the case, the facts don't seem to support a self-defense claim.

What am I missing?

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 11:02 am 
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Nothing Chip. :)

The conviction was incorrect (IMO) the appeal might redress that.....

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 11:02 am 
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oralandar brand-wms

wafer atty says his demeanor after sentencing was "pure panic" like a "wild animal" who doesn't know what happened to him

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 12:00 pm 
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That is just it Chip, it should have been manslaughter at most. There is no way that the burden of proof for murder 2 was met. They never proved any malice at all. There really needs to be an independent review process after convictions like this that checks to see if the requirements for the statute that the defendant was found guilty of. I mean come on, they didn't even attempt to present all of the requirements for murder 2 and the jury still found him guilty.

The real issue is that if the reason it couldn't be self defense was because he claimed it was an accident, doesn't that mean it HAS to be manslaughter or that states equivalent of negligent homicide?


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 1:24 pm 
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Rumpole wrote:
Nothing Chip. :)

The conviction was incorrect (IMO) the appeal might redress that.....


So, second-degree murder standard wasn't met, but he was convicted anyway - when he should have been convicted only of manslaughter? So, the appeal will address that, but the Judge's hands were tied with mandatory-minimum sentencing?

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 2:27 pm 
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I dont know, but the defense attorney's submissions were that Judge had leeway to sentence to less.

Dont know how familiar you are with case, Chip. IMO should have not been charged, or SD. That is why I am disapointed with length of sentence, but you are correct it is appropriate for M2.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 8:16 pm 
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I've been reading about this case, and what does it remind me of....a verdict we are currently waiting for in SA.

I think Mr. Wafer acted too quickly without first waiting to see who the 'intruder' was, but who knows, he was there, I wasn't.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 03, 2014 8:30 pm 
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If I bent over backwards to ignore the complete circumstances I MIGHT accept some sort of manslaughter.. Murder2 is just silly.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 04, 2014 8:22 am 
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I couldn't see how they got murder 2 out of this but I did not follow all of it. All I know is I know people who have had someone rush their door and before they knew it the door was kicked in a flash. So I can totally understand how he could have been in fear and acted due to that fear. And through the screen distorts what a person see. And these mandatory sentences need to go.


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PostPosted: Thu Sep 04, 2014 9:52 am 
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I know next to nothing (i.e. nothing except what I read in the sentencing articles yesterday) about this case, and don't wish to re-hash what you've spent 36 pages discussing. But unless there are other facts involved, him unlocking and opening the door is not a reasonable response to fear of an intruder, and his claim that he fired the shotgun while believing that it was unloaded is also unreasonable. Manslaughter sounds appropriate.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 04, 2014 2:52 pm 
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There is more Chip :)

4:30 am. A man minding his own business, asleep (in his "castle")

NOT just knocking on door.. a ruckus, pounding on door. from several sides. She tried side door and perhaps climbed on aircon at rear) McBride very drunk and stoned (intentionally) and fleeing from crashing her car (again) into a parked car (and a tree). She avoided "help" and preferred to flee the scene. She was on Wafers small porch area (conceded to be part of his home) and had managed to wrench the screen panel out of its (locked) frame... As Wafer opened the door her face loomed from the side, in the dark.
(It is speculated: VERY disorientated she mistook Wafers house for home and was loud and belligerent and persistent in trying to get in).

This was a neighborhood not unfamiliar with crime, drugs etc. Wafer had the situation imposed on him, McBride had willfully got into a lot of trouble already that night, and was likely going to cause more for herself and or somebody else.. whoever she met up with if not Wafer.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 04, 2014 3:28 pm 
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I still don't have a big problem with a manslaughter conviction. He opened the door, and fired at an unknown target.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 04, 2014 3:43 pm 
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I can see that at a pinch.. but even if manslaughter.. it has mitigating factors?

But I can not get past the fact that he was in his own home asleep and had this brought to him. Surely in your own home you are entitled to make less than perfect decisions.. especially roused at 4:30 am.

IF there had been an intruder.. and Wafer had NOT SHOT.. he may well have found himself over-powered.. maybe shot with his own gun.
I dont have problem imagining myself in that situation being genuinely in fear for my life. "Reasonable man" test I think?

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 04, 2014 3:55 pm 
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Rumpole wrote:
I can see that at a pinch.. but even if manslaughter.. it has mitigating factors?

But I can not get past the fact that he was in his own home asleep and had this brought to him. Surely in your own home you are entitled to make less than perfect decisions.. especially roused at 4:30 am.

IF there had been an intruder.. and Wafer had NOT SHOT.. he may well have found himself over-powered.. maybe shot with his own gun.
I dont have problem imagining myself in that situation being genuinely in fear for my life. "Reasonable man" test I think?


Bear in mind that I'm 95% ignorant of all of the details of the case.

But from what little I know: she wasn't inside the house. If you make that one change, IMHO he's justified in using deadly force, and has the presumption of reasonableness. But she wasn't. She was still outside, and he opened the door. That's the sticking point for me. Had she broken in the door and entered his home: justifiable homicide.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 04, 2014 4:03 pm 
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A bit of a side issue too:
Seems Cops put it down to self defense early on. Did not secure crime scene or do finger prints etc until a week+ later. Did not take screen with gun-shot hole... told Wafer he could remove it and put in storage etc. Later retrieved it from his basement... etc.

I see your post ahead of me posting this, Chip
I agree that "in the house" is a step further.... (it was actually conceded by Judge that "the Porch" is regarded as part of his house)
Seems little doubt she did manage to dislodge the screen panel and so was (technically) breaking and entering? the house proper.

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