‘Flies in the face of human nature’: Stunned dissent takes Minnesota Supreme Court to task for new self-defense rule that mandates a ‘duty to retreat before making threats’

Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Paul Thissen, on the left; former justice Margaret Chutich, on the right – both jurists are inset against an image of the state supreme court building.

Left inset: Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Paul Thissen (Minnesota Courts). Right inset: Former Minnesota Supreme Court justice Margaret Chutich (Minnesota Courts). Background: The Minnesota State Supreme Court Building on Jan. 10, 2020, in St. Paul, Minn. (AP Photo/Jim Mone).

The Minnesota Supreme Court on Wednesday added a new limit to the state’s self-defense law — prompting a stunned dissent that criticized the ruling as inimical to both humanity and law.

In the case itself, Earley Romero Blevins brandished his machete to fend off a group of three people, two men and a woman, at a train station in downtown Minneapolis. The woman and Blevins were arguing when one of the men pulled out a knife and threatened to “slit” Blevins’ throat — the threat that prompted the machete to be wielded in the first place. The other man later “aggressively walked up to Blevins,” who continued to wave his machete at the trio until they left. In the end, no one was physically harmed during the altercation.

Blevins was charged with two counts of felony second-degree assault-fear with a dangerous weapon. He claimed self-defense, an affirmative defense that admits the crime occurred but argues the crime was justified under the circumstances. Under Minnesota law, self-defense is defined as the use of “reasonable force” while “resisting or aiding another to resist an offense against the person.”

Judges in the Land of 10,000 Lakes, however, long ago created an element of self-defense law that requires a person “to retreat when reasonably possible.” Three courts in a row decided Blevins did not make the retreat necessary to claim self-defense. The state’s supreme court took the occasion to create a new rule extending the retreat exception to mere threats of force when using a “dangerous weapon.”

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