🔗 Share this article Hoosier State Female Killed After Showing Up at Incorrect Residence for Cleaning Duties Law enforcement officials in the state are considering whether to file charges against a resident who allegedly fatally shot a female when she accidentally arrived to the incorrect location where she believed assigned to clean a home. Police discovered Maria Florinda Rios Perez De Velasquez, 32 years old, dead early Wednesday morning at the entrance of a residence in a suburban town, a community of about 10,000 residents outside Indianapolis. She was part of a cleaning team that had arrived at the wrong address, police stated in a press statement. Authorities have not publicly named the shooter, but investigators turned over the results from the investigation to Kent Eastwood, the local district attorney, on Friday. This case will focus on Indiana’s “castle doctrine” laws, which permit residents to use lethal force to prevent what they genuinely think is an unlawful intrusion into their home. But the killing has shocked many. The victim’s spouse, her husband, told WRTV that he was standing with her at the front door but was unaware she had been shot until she fell into his arms, bleeding. On a fundraising page, her sibling said that she was a mother of four. Thirty-one states have similar laws to Indiana on the books, according to the national legislative research group. In comparable incidents elsewhere, authorities have filed criminal charges against people who used a firearm outside their residences, including a guilty plea by an elderly man who shot a Black teenager when the teen approached his home by mistake. In another state, a man was convicted of homicide for killing a female in a vehicle who entered his driveway in error. The incident highlights ongoing debates about stand-your-ground statutes and their application in everyday situations.