Caribbean National Weekly

Burden of proof shifted to prosecutors in Stand Your Ground cases

By Andrew Karim··1 min read
Burden of proof shifted to prosecutors in Stand Your Ground cases
Key Points(5)
  • Florida has passed a law that spells out that prosecutors, and not defendants, have the burden of proof in pretrial "stand your ground" hearings.
  • <div class="article-content--body-wrapper-side-floater "></div> Republican Governor Rick Scott signed a bill Friday that will force prosecutors to prove during a pretrial hearing that defendants weren't acting in self-defense when they committed an act of violence.
  • The law took effect as soon as Scott signed it.
  • Before Friday, the burden of proof in pretrial hearings was on defendants.
  • The Florida Supreme Court issued a ruling in 2015 that made that clear.

Florida has passed a law that spells out that prosecutors, and not defendants, have the burden of proof in pretrial "stand your ground" hearings.


Republican Governor Rick Scott signed a bill Friday that will force prosecutors to prove during a pretrial hearing that defendants weren't acting in self-defense when they committed an act of violence. The law took effect as soon as Scott signed it.

Before Friday, the burden of proof in pretrial hearings was on defendants. The Florida Supreme Court issued a ruling in 2015 that made that clear. Republican lawmakers responded to the ruling by pushing the bill Scott signed.

Only four of the other 21 state "stand your ground" laws mention burden of proof - Alabama, Colorado, Georgia and South Carolina - and all place it on defendants.

Related Stories

St. Vincent announces emergency measures to offset rising global prices

St. Vincent announces emergency measures to offset rising global prices

Bahamas imposes travel ban on visitors from three African countries over Ebola concerns

Bahamas imposes travel ban on visitors from three African countries over Ebola concerns

CARICOM foreign ministers condemn intensified US measures against Cuba

CARICOM foreign ministers condemn intensified US measures against Cuba

St. Lucia PM cautious on restoring death penalty amid growing public calls

St. Lucia PM cautious on restoring death penalty amid growing public calls