Being that I am a Policeman Frenchy I think I have a pretty good idea about what would happen.
Trust me, anything that "could" happen is a whole lot better then you being the dead body in your house.
Great, so you can comment on that. When I got my concealed, I read the recomanded books, talked to police officers that I met at the range, because "what happens when the shooting stops" was my main concern. Call me paranoiac, but as much as I support protecting your familly with a firearm, I know that we live in a society filled with monked up values ranging from soccer moms to money hungry lawyers and clueless judges.
So between the chitchating and J. Farman's "
The Farman method of Defensive Handgunning", I figured that this is what would happen to me once I had to shoot someone in my house in fear for my familly's life:
Farman's advises to leave the house with your flock, and so did the couple SLC police officers I chatted with. They said they are not in the "rescuing business" anymore, so they will surround your house like if it was still full of bad guys, and if I stay in it, the first thing that will come in will be a flash grenade or a dog. Neither of both will know that I'm "the good guy". Then the smoke settles, and everyone is taged, they'll collect my firearm as evidence, the scene will be treated as a criminal homicide, I'll be read my Miranda rights, blood sample, gun residue test, interrogation. It's my understanding that Police has to treat the case as a standard criminal investigation till I get cleared by the County Attorney about a week later.
<To me that means right there, that my neighbors will be awaken by a bunch of police cars, see guns drawn toward my house, and me leaving handcuffed for shooting someone. Doubt my daughter will have many friends staying home after that, nor Bobby Goestochurch lending me his snowblower.>
The SLC concealed instructor said that in Salt Lake county about 80% of the self defense shooting end up in "wrongfull death" civil suit of an average cost of $50,000 and a 10 years length suit. They also warn about lawyers that are pretty good at describing you as the local gun nut,
that lured "honor student 1976" into his house so he could try his new lazer scope with his man killer special edition bullets..
<Great so now I have to leave the next 10 years with a Damocles sword on the top of my head, and barely make hands meet at the end of each month, probably not being able to pay for my kid's college.
Then I doubt that familly and/or friends/gang of the rat I shot will stay on the sidewalk crying. They might gear up and my house will be called "the Alamo", but will probably settle for the coward approach of "drive by" my daughter on her way to school. Since I don't want to take that risk, that means I'll have to freacking move out of the house/state, go thru the hassle of finding a new job for my wife and I, break my kid's heart because we have to move once again to a new place and she really loved it here, had so really great friends.>
That's what I mean with "snowballing undesirable events". Granteed I prefer to use my 1911 and ruin the rest of my life, rather than having my familly member killed. After familly meeting, we concluded that the "house defense" plan was to stay upstair and shoot at anyone coming upstairs. Let the bad guys run away with TVs and laptops from downstairs. In other words, we are protecting the bodies, not the goods. It seems the best economical option anyway, plus an extra chance of "delaying staying out of trouble".