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Cleaning woman found dead after wrong house in Indiana

Police in Indiana said that detectives had completed the initial investigation of the murder of a cleaning lady who was mistakenly sent to the wrong address. She was fatally shot by a resident, who was afraid an intruder might be outside.

The Whitestown Metropolitan Police Department has submitted its findings to the Boone County Prosecutor's Office to be reviewed to determine if criminal charges will also be filed in connection with the Wednesday's murder.

Kent Eastwood told local media that the "castle doctrine", part of Indiana's stand your ground law, complicates the case. The "stand your grounds" law gives individuals the right to defend themselves from a home invasion, sometimes using deadly force.

Police identified the slain woman as Maria Florinda Rios Perez de Velasquez. She was 32 years old, from Indianapolis, and according to reports, was a Guatemalan immigrant who was a mother of four.

Rios Perez, her husband and two other residents arrived at the house shortly before dawn. One of them fired a gun into the woman's head.

The residents had called emergency-911 by then to report that a possible break-in was in progress.

Police said that officers found Rios Perez dead and determined she and her husband had been "members of the cleaning crew who mistakenly arrived to the wrong address."

Police said there was no evidence that a break-in attempt had taken place.

The husband identified by the Indianapolis Star, Mauricio Vélazquez, said to an online news website that he and wife believed they were at a correct address and double checked the location before approaching the home.

Velazquez, according to The Star, said that the couple was standing on the porch of the house, located in Indianapolis suburb Whitestown when the shooting took place.

The police have not identified who they believe is responsible for the shooting, or the identity of the resident. They say the investigation is a "complex and delicate case" that's still evolving.

This incident was reminiscent of recent cases where homeowners opened fire at individuals who were mistakenly misidentified as intruders when they arrived at the wrong address.

The county prosecutor who is reviewing the Whitestown matter will have to consider an Indiana state statute that allows people to use deadly force in their home to protect themselves when they believe that they are being threatened by an intruder. Steve Gorman, Los Angeles; Himani Sarkar, editing.

(source: Reuters)