🔗 Share this article Indiana Woman Killed When Showing Up at Incorrect Residence for Cleaning Duties Authorities in Indiana are weighing possible criminal charges against a resident who reportedly shot and killed a woman after she accidentally arrived to the wrong address where she believed scheduled to clean a home. Officers found Maria Florinda Rios Perez De Velasquez, aged 32, deceased early Wednesday morning on the front porch of a residence in a suburban town, a community of about 10,000 residents outside Indianapolis. She belonged to a cleaning team that had gone to the incorrect house, police stated in an official release. Authorities have not publicly identified the person who fired, but investigators turned over their findings from the investigation to Kent Eastwood, the county prosecutor, on Friday. The incident will focus on Indiana’s self-defense statutes, which allow a person to use deadly force to stop what they genuinely think is an unlawful intrusion into their dwelling. However the shooting has stunned the community. The victim’s spouse, Mauricio Velazquez, stated to local media that he was standing with her at the front door but was unaware she had been hit until she collapsed into his arms, bleeding. On a online donation site, her sibling said that Rios Perez was a parent to four children. Thirty-one states have similar laws to Indiana on the books, according to the national legislative research group. In similar cases elsewhere, prosecutors have successfully brought charges against people who used a firearm outside their homes, such as a admission of guilt by an elderly man who shot a Black teenager after the youth came to his door accidentally. In New York, a man was convicted of second-degree murder for killing a female inside a car who entered his driveway by mistake. The incident highlights continuing discussions surrounding self-defense laws and their application in real-life scenarios.