Yes, that might be what the judges were
told but they rejected it. Martin's case wasn't dismissed, it was commuted to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility - if anything Martin is a great example of why gun control is needed. He was suffering from a paranoid personality disorder and he shouldn't have had a gun (both legally and practically). His self defence argument never washed and it certainly was not the basis on which his sentence was amended to manslaughter. This is what LJ Woolf said:
From this report:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2001/oc...martin.ukcrime
But by your logic the commission of a crime disbars you from the protection of the law. It makes you an
outlaw. So why should Martin be any more deserving of sympathy than the burglars? Why is his back story relevant, if the burglars' are not? You would argue that the burglars setting foot on Martin's property should disbar them from any protection under the law, it should in your words:
Therefore surely Martin forfeits his rights to protection under the law by means of his possession of an illegal weapon? He was a criminal before anyone set foot on his property. By your logic he is as deserving of his murder conviction as the burglar is of his death because
'By his criminal act the murderer forfeits his rights' is equally true. Had he not illegally possessed the weapons the events which led to his murder conviction would not have occurred.
And that's before you even get into the facts of the case. Martin's story did not tally with the forensic evidence. For example you said:
Yes, that's what Martin said, but there was significant evidence that Martin was lying. Perhaps there would be scope for sympathy had the burglar had been found dead at the foot of Martin's stairs having died from a single gunshot wound to the chest. But in fact the burglar who was killed, who was a 16 year old boy, was found dead outside the property having suffered multiple gunshot wounds to the legs and a fatal wound to the back. Did Martin need to 'defend himself' from a boy who was running away? Or was he enacting his paranoid fantasy of gunning down a 'thieving gypsy'? This image of Martin as an innocent man just protecting his property having 'surprised' some burglars and fired at them in the dark from the top of his stairs is a conveniently sympathetic image but not really commensurate with the facts of the case or his own history of gun related violence, his apparent mental illness and the poor state of his property that he was seeking to 'defend' from others but apparently couldn't be bothered taking any care of himself.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2000/ap...artin.ukcrime2
There were no winners in that story, and certainly no heroes and if it's the best example you can give of why people should have guns to protect themselves from burglars, it's a pretty poor one.