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Wednesday, September 20, 2006

A man shot and killed an intruder

Oakland Park, Florida

From the September 20, 2006 Miami Herald :

A man shot and killed an intruder who was breaking into his parents' townhouse in Oakland Park, according to the Broward Sheriff's Office.

The intruder has not been identified, but is believed to be a teenager.

Richard McKinley, 27, was sleeping in his parents townhouse at 3259 NW 44th St. around 11:54 a.m. when he was awakened by a noise, according to BSO.

McKinley noticed that an intruder was in the house, and shot him.

Deputies are investigating, and have set up a perimeter search for two possible accomplices to the home invasion.

Less than two hours after the shooting, Paul and Victoria McKinley returned to their pink townhouse in the Montage by the Lake complex to find swarms of police and TV reporters.

The couple said their son was ``doing fine.''

Family members of the dead intruder were also at the scene.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Home invasion leads to one death

Beaumont, Texas

From Beaumont’s TheExaminer.com of September 16, 2006
Home invasion leads to one death

Beaumont Police officers responded to the 6000 block of Major Dr. Sept. 15 at approximately 8:37 p.m. on reports of a home invasion. Once officers arrived at the scene, the alleged perpetrators had already been apprehended … by the victim.

According to the victim, he was in his residence when he heard a knock at the door. When the door was opened, two Hispanic men allegedly forced their way into the home, brandishing knives.

The victim stated that, at that time, the two suspects demanded money. The victim went to the bedroom, followed by one of the suspects, and retrieved some money from the bedside table. The suspect did not notice the handgun belonging to the victim that was also in the bedside table, but the victim did. The suspect then, according to the victim, turned to rummage through the closet, presumably searching for more money.

The victim stated that he ordered the suspect to drop his knife. The second suspect entered the bedroom but would not drop his weapon. The victim fired three shots at the second suspect, wounding him in the left arm, the left leg and the left side. During the commotion, the first suspect retrieved his knife. The victim fired one round at the first suspect, wounding him in the left side of his chest.

Responding officers called EMS to transport the suspects to Christus St. Elizabeth Hospital. The suspect who received injuries to the chest received emergency treatment for his injuries but died a short time after arriving at the hospital. The status of the second suspect is unverified.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Gun-toting citizen foils robbery, leads APD to arrest

Albany, Georgia

From Albany’s WALB.com of September 14, 2006


A bystander broke up a Northwest Albany armed robbery he witnessed by firing two gunshots in the air. He then followed the armed robbers as they fled, and alerted police who arrested the three gunmen.

Now, the man who stopped the robbers and their victims are too scared to talk to us on camera, afraid the young crooks will come after them.

Just before 11:00 Wednesday night two gunmen jumped a man and a woman in the back parking lot as they left Mama Gina's Restaurant on North Slappey.

The male victim, Michael, is afraid to show his face on camera, worried the robbers will come after him again. "He had a red bandana on, waving a gun all around, threatened to shoot us if we didn't give them the money."

Marcus saw the robbery happening, and decided to help. He is too afraid to give his name or talk to us, but when he saw the robber's guns, he went to get his. Mama Gina's owner Vinny Mannino said, "The guy go in his car and get his gun. He shoot one shot in the air to scare the guys, they run away. He shot another shot in the air to make them stop, but they keep running."

The two robbers jumped into a car and fled down Tenth Avenue. Marcus followed in his car, letting police know what was going on. Mannino said "He call 911, from the car. He was communicating with 911."

The robbers threw their guns and the victim's wallet and purse out the window as they drove North on Slappey, and then onto the bypass, where Police stopped them.

Charged with armed robbery are 19-year-old Dejean Thomas and two 16-year-old juveniles.

Marcus told us that he just wanted to help, that's why he rushed the armed robbers. Mannino said, "I think we need more people like him, help each other."

Michael said there is no doubt Marcus is a hero. "He's a pretty good guy. It's great somebody around here wants to help, and get involved."

But Marcus and Michael admit they are both still scared, worried that the robbers or their friends will seek revenge. Marcus said the Police took his .357 Magnum as evidence after the robbery, but they assured him he would get it back soon.

Too Many Bills Of Rights?

From http://mensnewsdaily.com/2006/09/14/too-many-bills-of-rights/
September 14, 2006
Vox Populi, John Longenecker

There is only one Bill Of Rights. Everything else is a cloned error of nature. What’s a cloned error of nature? Well, it’s a natural mistake repeated and repeated, and a lot of Americans are making what you might call a natural mistake.

The Founding Fathers just don’t get enough ink. Our forefathers are pounded in this century nearly as much as in their time, poo-poo’d as obsolete, too young, insolent, unnecessary, over-reactive, their work product imitated if not challenged.

Yet the people who criticize them most live here, by choice, under the blessings of their forefathers’ endeavors and of their profound successes. Often, the critics imitate the forefathers’ finest product, the first ten amendments to the Constitution Of The United States. As a model, it is summoned by people seeking justice. Or compassion. Or cooperation. While ignoring the truth and guidance of the progenitor of them all.

Are these sprouting Bills necessary in the workplace, the hospital or the campus? Can they be created, only to be a tool of political abuse under color of compassion and improvement?

Yes, yes they can. And with the force of law in some cases.

In 1975, Kalifornia Governor Jerry Brown supported and signed into law the Inmate Bill Of Rights, which was not about giving justice to inmates, but latitude in viewing pornography. Nice move, Jerry. That’s about the time when people were putting the K in Kalifornia.

Decency is a real problem in politics, isn’t it?

In 1982, Brown opposed the Victims’ Bill Of Rights as costly and confusing. [Search the Internet with Keyword Jerry Brown, Bill Of Rights for that source and more.]

Many states have a Psychiatric Patient Bill Of Rights.

There is a Bill Of Rights for kids.

Some college campuses have the Students’ Bill Of Rights.

More and more groups are demanding their own Bill Of Rights.

And this is at the heart of the complaint - too much departure from the original Rights as if they are not sufficient. Okay, John, how’s this a big deal?

It’s a big deal because the original Bill Of Rights is sufficient. The idea of introducing a Bill Of Rights to a group of persons might seem kindly at first, even bold, but it is separatist in its own way. Americans – decent Americans — don’t need to be prompted by a series of binding reminders to be compassionate or decent. I know that many of these Bills were written for clarification following years of practice which operated on science or rules more than patient contact or acknowledging the client. I understand fully that some persons in America may be forgotten. It was genuinely a colder system in business, in psychiatry, everywhere. There were and are decent, compassionate and genuinely talented practitioners, sure, but the whole of every system needed re-examination and clarification as a human endeavor. I know.

These Bills may strive to serve these Americans better, to facilitate hearing complaints and to make sure they are not forgotten or mistreated, but these formalized standards are certainly not rights, except the right to be treated like a human being. It is a misconstruing of what is a Right in this country, in that Rights are often confused with entitlement, courtesy, integrity and simply feeling for others – things which should already come from the profession.

If only it ended there, it might be harmless, but practices like this tend to mislead on the very concept of what a Right is.

Something new has been added which waters down the original Document and original intent, and that is seeing rights that aren’t there and / or extending rights to non-citizens.

Rights in America are things to be protected by government, and protected by advocates of principals, attorneys. Rights in original intent were meant to be enough to get one by, the rest being up to you. This is the part being dissolved. This is an American value based on our History being dissolved.

As a broader example, tort law shifted to a doctrine not of deciding on the basis of the merits of the interference complaint – where one’s individual rights were to be respected in the interest of justice – but shifted now to social engineering away from the concept of justice to a concept of social justice for groups to be assessed on the basis of who could best bear the brunt of the damages. This was a warped kind of Bill Of Rights for the disadvantaged, and opened the door to a great deal more injustices in nuisance suits and more. In effect, it weaponized tort law and it granted unjust clout.

As our Constitution places limits on government, so we must ourselves place limits in responsibility. I’m speaking, of course, about giving rights to terrorists, illegal aliens and others who make a joke of our sovereignty and administration of justice.

A few things need to be restated about the original Bill Of Rights if you’re going to be using it as a model for your industry, profession or political purpose.

1. Our Bill Of Rights was written for Americans, and for good citizens at that. Citizenship – good citizenship – is an important facet of personal responsibility, and this includes not passing out rights willy-nilly for political gain. It’s not good citizenship to work to hand out rights to those who have themselves demonstrated bad citizenship, merely because it feels good for you. [It’s almost a sort of Stockholm Syndrome, isn’t it? Your head tells you it’s wrong, but your feelings to surrender and cooperate seem irresistable.]

Make sense? Original intent? Stockholm Syndrome?

Handing out rights to terrorists, non-combatant or not, or handing out rights to aliens or handing out privilege masquerading as rights is an attack to dissolve the rights of the citizenry everywhere, and specifically not to share them properly. And on that subject of sharing, I’m afraid that they are not to be shared as some great sense of compassion and mercy: they are to be reserved only for the sovereign in America as an integral part of what defines our way of life. Any dissolution of that – irrespective of how it is stated or spun – is a subtle attack on our sovereignty by way of dissolving the social contract.

Is there a middle ground here? If there is, I am inclined to dissolve it. It’s one of those subjects on sovereignty not open to discussion. It’s one thing to extend courtesy and humanity to anyone who enters our country – as visitors or otherwise – and even Christian to visit those in prison, but when we surrender to feelings rather than good sense or cooperate with those who do, then we give away the nation for no worthwhile return. And we don’t get it back.

If you knew the price of such false justice or compassion, would you be able to stop?

I’m afraid that some against America do in fact know the price, and that they work for just that. They have weaponized the law, the concept of rights and the cooperation of the good-hearted to the detriment of the nation, and for their political gain.

2. The amendments are pretty much clear and not in need of tweaking. It is the people who are in need of adjustment after a look at how far we’ve left behind that values system over the last few generations.

You see the rights are quite clear, but they are fudged, parsed and totally misread for political advantage instead of to the interest of the country. In this, decency – or indecency in the form of bad faith politicking – plays a very important role in social engineering, driving the nation down.

Too many Bills Of Rights? Yup.

The rights you’re really looking for are already there in the original document, spelled out in other plain language, but clearly there. In many, many ways, friends, they are limited, limited by self-restraint. You can read it for yourself. It says that rights are accompanied by responsibility. And that good citizenship has the right to demand this of each of us.

And that Citizen is fairly defined, and that rights belong to citizens only. It’s all there. What you say you’re looking for is already there. It’s limited, but there.

Additional Bills Of Rights may be well-intentioned, but they are not necessary, and like most things, can be abused and weaponized, as they are now in our dealings with enemies of America. They can be introduced as an emotional balm written to soothe, or they can find rights which do not exist, and give the flavor that they do, emboldening the enemy, summoning the good-heartedness of Americans to be used for their compassion.

I say stick to the original. It does many things for us, including defining what a right is, who has it and who doesn’t, and of who is a Citizen and who isn’t.

Why do you think Citizenship is sought so? Because it is precious.

Sorry, but you’re not a citizen until you’re a citizen. And if it means anything at all to you and to the rest of America, American Civil Rights belong only to the Citizen.

The rest may be decency, humanity and compassion, but it is not American rights.

There is a difference, and that difference is good for the country.

________________________________________________________

John Longenecker’s Second Edition of The Case For Nationwide Concealed Carry will be on bookshelves soon. Visit his website at www.TransferOfWealth.net

Monday, September 11, 2006

Man with AK-47 helps thwart robbery

When Arthur Winters saw two armed robbers terrorizing his neighborhood, he did the only thing he could think of: He asked his wife to bring him his AK-47.

"I had to get it to protect my family and the neighbors and all that," Winters said.

It was part of a series of events, including a fistfight, rock-throwing and haphazard gunshots, that hammered the plans of two robbery suspects Saturday afternoon, leaving one shot and the other stuck in the mud.

Both men faced aggravated robbery charges.

A police report told the tale:

The suspects pulled up in a Ford F-150 and approached Cesar Arellano, busy installing a roof on a home under construction near Barton Court and Hughes Avenue.

Formalities were brief. One of the suspects suddenly put Arellano in a chokehold, and the other pulled out a gun. They demanded money and his rings.

Arellano grabbed the gun. The struggle began.

Arellano's brother, also on site, saw the robbery. He charged and punched one of the intruders.

Amid the mayhem, the handgun went off, and a stray bullet struck one of the suspects.

The brothers managed to break free and run to Winters' house for help.

The wounded suspect bolted for Arellano's vehicle. The other ran for his own pickup.

Neither got too far.

Police later traced the wounded suspect to a location a little more than 2 miles away. He was taken to Wilford Hall Medical Center.

The other suspect's getaway pickup had become stuck in a ditch and then between a curb and a log.

Then it got worse for him. Arellano and his brother started to hurl rocks at the pickup and broke a window. The suspect bailed out, briefly pointed a gun at the brothers and then ran through an open field.

Enter Winters.

He followed through the field, toting the military weapon at his side. When he fired a few rounds at the ground and the suspect kept going, Winters fired some more.

"Then he stopped, completely stopped," Winters said. "I ran up to him, and he just told me not to kill him."

Winters, along with Arellano and his brother, held the suspect until police arrived. The neighborhood was again safe.

"It was a robbery that just went wrong," Winters said.

Monday, September 04, 2006

Supressed .45 ACP

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Police: Couple Killed After Seeing Rape

Friday September 1, 2006 7:01 PM


PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A couple found a man raping a young woman in their driveway and tried to flee with her but were shot to death by the attacker, police said.

The teenager was also shot and was expected to recover, police said. A suspect was arrested.

The couple came upon the attack when returning to their home in the Fern Rock neighborhood from a night out late Wednesday, police said. The 18-year-old woman broke free and began screaming about the assault, and she and the couple then fled while the attacker fired at them with a semiautomatic handgun, according to police.

The three tried to hide nearby, but the assailant found them and fired more shots as they lay on the ground, Chief Inspector Joseph Fox said.

``It sounds like it was all happening in a matter of seconds,'' Fox said.

The names of the couple were being withheld pending notification of family.

Kevin White, 24, of Philadelphia, was arrested a short time later and will be charged with murder, rape, aggravated assault and other offenses, Fox said. Police said they recovered a gun during the arrest.

The attack was one of six shootings - two of them fatal - overnight in Philadelphia.