92-year-old vet takes out a robber

paxton

Well-known member
Nov 13, 2006
1,246
2
Huntsville, AL
He sat at the top of the stairs and just when the robber kicked in the door, the guy aimed right for the heart and pulled the trigger.

Jones told the Enquirer: "These people aren?t worth any more to me than a groundhog. They have our country in havoc. We got so many damned crooked people walking around today. I was hoping another one would come up. I aimed right for his heart."

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=743_1346890621

He's a farmer. He has owned his farm since 1955. He lives alone since his wife died in 2006.

The part he's mad about is the police took his rifle. But a neighbor loaned him his 12-gauge and a local pawn shop offered a replacement too.
 

Disco Dog

Well-known member
Apr 8, 2009
198
0
Costa Rica C.A.
paxton said:
He sat at the top of the stairs and just when the robber kicked in the door, the guy aimed right for the heart and pulled the trigger.

Jones told the Enquirer: "These people aren?t worth any more to me than a groundhog. They have our country in havoc. We got so many damned crooked people walking around today. I was hoping another one would come up. I aimed right for his heart."

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=743_1346890621

He's a farmer. He has owned his farm since 1955. He lives alone since his wife died in 2006.

The part he's mad about is the police took his rifle. But a neighbor loaned him his 12-gauge and a local pawn shop offered a replacement too.
Classic!!
 

Drillbit

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2005
5,943
1
Glasgow Ky
In Kentucky we don't have any fancy names for the right to shoot intruders. "He needed killin" is acceptable.
 

varova87

Well-known member
Mar 21, 2006
3,558
0
Texas
Normally most people would advise against making such statements as it could be used against him as malicious intent.

I'm far from a lawyer, but I guess since this falls so evidently under the castle doctrine, statements like that pose absolutely no danger to him?

Regardless, awesome story.
 

Mike_Rupp

Well-known member
Mar 26, 2004
3,604
0
Mercer Island, WA
varova87 said:
Normally most people would advise against making such statements as it could be used against him as malicious intent.

I'm far from a lawyer, but I guess since this falls so evidently under the castle doctrine, statements like that pose absolutely no danger to him?

Regardless, awesome story.

I'm no lawyer either, but one has to be found guilty by a jury of one's peers. Something tells me he doesn't have to worry.
 

varova87

Well-known member
Mar 21, 2006
3,558
0
Texas
Mike_Rupp said:
I'm no lawyer either, but one has to be found guilty by a jury of one's peers. Something tells me he doesn't have to worry.

Oh, I wouldn't doubt that for a second. My curiosity was more along the lines of, let's say if the family of the perp were to read the statements and decide to press charges, if they would ever even make it before a judge in the first place.
 

Rover Mac

Well-known member
Feb 7, 2006
634
1
Los Angeles
spaces.msn.com
From the Daily Telegraph
Meanwhile back in the Uk...
Farm tenant arrested after burglars shot was 'plagued by break-ins'

The scene of the shooting in Melton Mowbray
By Nick BrittenLast Updated: 11:43AM BST 03/09/2012
A farm tenant and his wife who were arrested after two suspected burglars were shot at their isolated home had been the victims of a number of robberies.

The man is believed to have grabbed a legally owned gun after they were disturbed by the break-in early yesterday.

He is understood to have fired at the intruders who then fled the isolated house at Melton Mowbray, Leics, before calling the police.

Minutes later, an ambulance was called to treat a man with gunshot injuries nearby. It is understood that call was made by one of the suspected burglars.

The arrested man's mother said: "This is not the first time they have been broken into.

"They have been robbed three or four times. One of them was quite nasty.

"They have not been injured but property has been stolen."

Local farmers said the area has been increasingly targeted by car thieves.

One said: "We had three Land Rovers stolen. We had fitted one with a tracker and it was recovered in Birmingham."

A second man was later treated for gunshot injuries after arriving at Leicester Royal Infirmary, 10 miles from the scene of the shooting. Neither of the men is said to be seriously injured.

Yesterday the businessman and his wife were arrested on suspicion of causing grievous bodily harm. Four men, understood to be the suspected burglars, were also arrested.

The case will reignite the debate over a householder’s right to defend his property, which began in the late 1990s after the farmer Tony Martin shot two burglars at his remote Norfolk home. In 1999, Martin fired at Brendan Fearon, 29, and Fred Barras, 16, after they broke into the house in Emneth Hungate.

Three shots were fired, Barras was hit in the back and despite escaping through a window died moments later. Martin was convicted of murder and jailed for life, which was reduced on appeal to manslaughter and five years’ jail.

In 2009, the millionaire businessman Munir Hussain fought back with a metal pole and a cricket bat against a knife-wielding burglar who tied up his family at their home in Buckinghamshire. Hussain was jailed for two and a half years, despite his attacker being spared prison.

Appeal judges reduced the sentence to a year’s jail, suspended.

The case prompted David Cameron to announce that home owners and shopkeepers would have the right to protect themselves against burglars and robbers.

Last year, Peter Flanagan, 59, who fatally stabbed a burglar armed with a machete at his home in Salford, Great Manchester, escaped prosecution after the Crown Prosecution Service ruled that he was acting in self defence.

Yesterday the Melton Mowbray cottage was sealed off by police. Welby Grange Farm is owned by John Hobill, 84, and his wife Evelyn, 76, and is the registered address for JT and RT Hobill, which lists itself as a farming business.

A woman who answered the phone said they were “not allowed” to talk about the incident. She said the cottage was privately rented and the incident was nothing to do with the family that owned the farm. She said the person living there was not a farmer.

A Leicestershire Police spokesman said: “A 35-year-old man and a 43-year-old woman were arrested in Melton on suspicion of GBH and four men, aged 27, 23, 31 and 33, were arrested at Leicester Royal Infirmary on suspicion of aggravated burglary.” All remain in custody.
 

Rover Mac

Well-known member
Feb 7, 2006
634
1
Los Angeles
spaces.msn.com
Some Dude said:
:banghead: My brain just exploded.
So much for "An Englishman's home is his castle"
Recent British gun control laws have seen a marked decline in legal gun ownership,
But crime involving firearms has increased dramatically !

The thieves had stolen 3 local farmers Land Rovers ( see article)
( if I was to steal a vehicle a LR would not be my first choice , let alone one owned by a working farmer)