At some point, I believe this would have been relevant to the discussion.
http://www.gadsdentimes.com/article/20100519/NEWS/100519835/1017/NEWS?Title=Man-shot-killed-while-allegedly-breaking-in-home
Seems like appropriate application of the "castle doctrine" if you ask (axe) me. Good for her!
There's no telling what would have happend if she had approached him unarmed...
This reminds of an actual case back in the '80s with a friend of mine that I had forgotten about. While he and his wife were at work one day, someone tried to break into his home through one of the bedroom windows. The uninvited visitor managed to get halfway inside the home before my friend's two pit bulls greeted him and started gnawing on his face and shoulder. The guy was arrested for his obvious intentions. Several months after the event, my buddy received an invitation to court. This jackass attempted to sue him for the medical damages along wiff the associated "pain and suffering" caused by the attack. Apparently, he was claiming that he needed to use my buddy's phone to call for assistance because his car broke down. Of course, the phone was next to the other bedroom window. The case was eventually tossed in the trash, but my buddy was down several thousand dollars associated with home repairs, attorney's fees and missed work. Sure, he probably could have sued the scumbag and won a judgment against him, but he likely would have never collected anything from him.
Now, before any of you lawyer-folks snopes this or try to claim that it's just another fabricated story, keep in mind that this was a good friend of mine at the time that these events took place. The incident happened in Smyrna, Georgia, in a neighborhood behind the northwest corner of the intersection of South Cobb Drive and Concord Road. I believe that it occurred in 1987 or 1988. If you need me to narrow it down further, I'll give you his name. I can even drive the home later this week and give you the actual address, assuming the neighborhood is still there.
I guess this is just another one of those "reasonable person" scenarios under dat "common law". How could an attorney ever take something like this?