It would be interesting to see see how different (if at all) the fallout would have been if the student had confronted the intruder with a firearm instead of a sword (I'm assumming the intruder was armed). Was it so much the necessity of employing deadly force, or the exotic nature of the weapon that has caused the controversy? Now, I have to go check that the drawbridge is up before retiring for the evening .
The sword seemed to be very much the point of debate. Quoting one of the articles about it:
"The incident was the second this week in which a man was wounded trying to commit a robbery. An off-duty Baltimore police officer shot and critically wounded a man who had tried to rob him at gunpoint in his Northeast Baltimore home, according to police. He chased the man for two blocks before opening fire, police said."
I found it a bit odd that no charges were mentioned against the officer, despite the fact that he chased the man for 2 blocks, then opened fire; whereas the student defended himself on his own property. IMO, the officer took things quite far; I'm not sure how it took him 2 blocks of pursuit to decide to start shooting.
That was definitely an interesting case. Personally, I think anyone who intrudes into someone's home (even the enclosed yard, like this case) with criminal intent and behaves violently towards the residents puts his own safety, and life, in forfeit. Period.
Laws vary state to state. Virginia law roughly states you have a "duty" to retreat in your own home, until you are unable to do so ... meaning if you're in the living room and someone breaks in, you are supposed to run to the bedroom instead of confronting them.
West Virginia has a "castle law", in which if someone is on your property (literally land, not even inside your house) uninvited, you tell them to leave, and you believe yourself to be in reasonable danger, you can engage them. There is no duty to retreat in the home, and intruders can be dealt with aggressively and forcefully. I had no idea about the difference in laws until after I moved here, and the Virginia law still shocks and concerns me, as I have family that lives there.
It's almost as if valor is illegal in some circumstances.