AP Enterprise: Deaths loom over self-defense laws
(AP)
<p><img src="http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20081205/capt.158447f5022048589cd54afe4ff99615.castle_doctrine_shooting_msrs104.jpg?x=130&y=86&q=85&sig=4uy8edy8wjSu_UJkl7rbCA--" align="left" height="86" width="130" alt="Surinder Singh, president of the Jackson Indian Storeowners Association, and stands inside his enclosed register, Oct. 9, 2008, at his Jackson, Miss., gas station/convenience store, says the state's castle doctrine law is clear: it gives you the right to protect your property. Singh, serves as a spokesman for Sarbrinder Pannu, who believed Mississippi's so-called castle doctrine gave him the legal right to use deadly force to recover a case of beer pilfered from the cooler, at his store. Police and prosecutors don't agree and charged him with murder and shooting into an occupied vehicle from a robbery-shooting incident Aug. 17. The case will go before the grand jury. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)" border="0" /> (http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081205/ap_on_re_us/castle_doctrine_shootings)AP - A convenience store clerk chased down a man and shot him dead over a case of beer this summer and was charged with murder. A week later, a clerk at another Jackson convenience store followed and fatally shot a man he said tried to rob him, and authorities let him go without charges.</p><br clear="all"/>
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