By TODD RICHMOND, Associated Press
An Indiana homeowner accused of killing a house cleaner was charged Monday with voluntary manslaughter in a case that raises questions about the limits of stand-your-ground laws.
Related Articles
Judge overseeing US Rep. McIver’s case tells prosecutors to turn over authorities’ texts
Hundreds of National Guard troops deployed to Portland and Chicago are being sent home
Bird flu cases are on the rise again, including 2 million turkeys. Will that affect your Thanksgiving dinner?
Supreme Court will review an old policy used to turn away asylum seekers at the US border
Off-duty pilot who tried to cut a flight’s engines midair to be sentenced in federal case
Curt Anderson could face up to 10 to 30 years in prison if he’s convicted and a fine. Guy Relford, an attorney for the homeowner, did not respond to a voice message seeking comment ahead of the charging decision.
Officers found Maria Florinda Rios Perez De Velasquez, 32, dead on the front porch of a home in Whitestown, an Indianapolis suburb, on Nov. 5. Authorities said the immigrant from Guatemala was part of a cleaning crew that had gone to the wrong house.
Her husband told media outlets that he was with her on the porch and someone fired through the front door. He didn’t realize that she had been shot until she fell back into his arms, bleeding.
In this image from video provided by WRTV, husband of Maria Florinda Rios Perez, Mauricio Velasquez, speaks during an interview in Indianapolis on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2025. (WRTV via AP)
Indiana is one of 31 states with a stand-your-ground law that permits homeowners to use deadly force to stop someone they believe is trying to unlawfully enter their dwelling. But police said that there’s no evidence the woman entered the home before she was shot.
The case echoes a similar episode in Missouri in 2023 when an 86-year-old man shot Ralph Yarl after the 16-year-old Black teenager came to his door by mistake. Missouri has a similar stand-your-ground law, but prosecutors charged the shooter, Andrew Lester, with first-degree assault and armed criminal action. He ultimately pleaded guilty to second-degree assault and didn’t go to trial.
In New York, which does not have a stand-your-ground law, a man was convicted in 2024 of second-degree murder for fatally shooting a woman inside a car who mistakenly came down the driveway of his rural upstate home.

Leave a Reply