🔗 Share this article Hoosier State Woman Fatally Shot When Showing Up at Wrong Residence for Cleaning Duties Law enforcement officials in the state are considering whether to file charges against a resident who allegedly shot and killed a woman when she mistakenly went to the wrong location where she believed assigned to clean a home. Officers found the victim, aged 32, dead early Wednesday morning on the front porch of a home in a suburban town, an area of about 10,000 residents outside Indianapolis. She belonged to a cleaning team that had gone to the incorrect house, according to police in a press statement. Officials did not publicly identified the shooter, but police submitted the results from the probe to the Boone County prosecutor, the county prosecutor, on Friday afternoon. This case will highlight Indiana’s self-defense statutes, which permit residents to use deadly force to prevent what they reasonably believe is an unlawful intrusion into their home. However the shooting has stunned the community. The victim’s spouse, Mauricio Velazquez, told WRTV that he was standing with her at the front door but didn’t realize she had been shot until she collapsed into his arms, injured. On a online donation site, her sibling mentioned that she was a mother of four. Thirty-one states have similar laws like Indiana’s on the books, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. In similar cases in other states, prosecutors have successfully brought charges against people who opened fire outside their residences, such as a guilty plea by an 86-year-old man who shot a Black teenager after the youth came to his door by mistake. In New York, a person was found guilty of homicide for killing a female in a vehicle who entered his property in error. This tragic event underscores ongoing debates about stand-your-ground statutes and their application in real-life scenarios.