OK, but I don't understand something then. Doesn't someone have to introduce some evidence to put the existence of the affirmative defense "into issue" (or whatever the precise term)? So doesn't it frequently wind up on the defense to put this evidence in in cases where the prosecution doesn't?Maybenaut wrote: ↑Fri Nov 12, 2021 1:49 pmIt doesn’t make any practical difference. The burden never shifts to the defense. The only time it matters is when a statutory element placed any burden on the defense. As I’ve said, I think it’s odd how Wi does this.andersweinstein wrote: ↑Fri Nov 12, 2021 12:25 pmThat after prosecution made all this insistence on treating it as an affirmative defense to be raised at trial, they might lose the charge for failing to meet their burden to disprove it taken as such.
I am also unclear on what that evidence would be in the case of the rifle exception. In my amateur way I would think it just to be: here's a 17-year-old with a firearm, OK, so we can charge them without considering any possible exceptions. At trial: wait, this is a rifle. Statute includes an exception applying to teens with rifles. BOOM, prosecution now has burden of showing exception doesn't apply (showing it's either it's short barrelled or teen wasn't in compliance with blah blah blah -- show he had no hunter safety cert, perhaps.) Is that how it would go?
If so, the only thing they would need in evidence is that it is a rifle.