My state is Florida, and I am a civilian.
I was seeing a girl (active duty)for about a month, before she told me she was married and her husband was coming back from a deployment in Iraq. It did not really bother me she was married, and we continued to see each other for an additional 4 months.
Somehow, he found out about it, and reported it to his CO. I guess she was arrested, or notified, or whatever, and she dissappeared for about 2 days.
On the 3rd day, two MPs showed up at my house, stating they were looking for her, and they were going to check my residence. They did not have civilian police with them, so I said no. They persisted, and I told them to come back with a warrant and the local police, or the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. They would not take no for an answer.
I informed them that I had a registered handgun, and was willing to use it if they entered my house without a warrant against my will. Florida allows lethal self-defense against breaking and entering, and they did not have a warrant or probabable cause, nor did they have any authority over civilians.
One of them said to me I had just threatened violence with a firearm, while interefering with an investigation (a crime supposedly), and he hoped I was ready to be prosecuted under the Florida 10-20-Life law. They also said that I knowingly engaged in Adultery with a service member, and was an accomplice that could be prosecuted in a Military Court as a participant. They also said that Florida still has Adultery laws on the books, and I can be prosecuted under those as well.
My question is: can I really be prosecuted through the Military for Adultery, and can refusing MPs entrance into my house and informing them I was willing to legally denfend my residence fall under the 10-20-Life Law? Can I also really be prosecuted for Adultery in Florida? I thought Lawrence vs Texas nullified silly laws like that.