Local College Student Defensive Gun Use

Local College Student Defensive Gun Use

Cops: 2 killings look like self-defense
UA student grabs his handgun, shoots intruders and calls police

By Alexis Huicochea

Tucson, Arizona | Published: 10.17.2008

Evidence in the fatal shooting of two intruders by a University of Arizona student appears to be consistent with his account that he was defending himself, police said.

The 23-year-old student shot and killed Shontel R. Early, 30, and Wesley O. Fenstermacher, 29, after the two men barged into his home early Thursday morning, said Sgt. Fabian Pacheco, a Tucson Police Department spokesman.

At least one of the intruders had a gun. The incident occurred shortly after 12:30 a.m., Pacheco said.

The police spokesman gave this account:

The student was home alone in a guest house in the 800 block of East Adams Street, near North Euclid Avenue and East Speedway.

There was a knock at the door, and one of the men asked for someone who did not live there.

The student looked past the man he was speaking with and saw another man, who had his face covered and had a gun.

The student retreated into his home and grabbed his own handgun, but the men made their way in.

The student fired, then called police to report the shooting. When officers arrived, they found the two men dead inside just past the doorway.

The student was questioned and is cooperating with police. His name was not released.

There is no indication that the student is or has been involved in any criminal activity, police said.

Pacheco could not say what the men were looking for or if they had possibly intended to go to a different house.

The case will be presented to the Pima County Attorney’s Office for a determination on whether the shootings were justified, Pacheco said.

And, of course, there’s the handwringing by the neighbors:

Neighbors were alarmed by the events.

Ali Adelmann, a UA sophomore, just moved into the neighborhood this semester. “It really worries me,” the Phoenix resident said. “All we can do is keep our doors and windows locked.”

And buy a gun and learn how to use it.

Worked for the victim here, didn’t it?

Jenny Wise also moved into the neighborhood in August. The 19-year-old sophomore said she wasn’t home at the time of the shootings. She had gone to a party, and when she arrived home around 2 a.m. she found her street taped off and flooded with police.

“It’s really the scariest thing,” Wise said.

“I’ve lived a sheltered life. This seems like a nice little neighborhood. I don’t know what I would’ve done if two guys tried to get into my house,” Wise said.

Well, Jenny, you’re too young to purchase a handgun for yourself, but you can receive one as a gift from a family member. Short of that, I recommend a shotgun. And some training.

And so much for the argument that college students aren’t responsible enough to possess firearms! But he still can’t possess or carry on campus.

Here are (apparently) mugshots of the two deceased (which suggests, and rather strongly, that these two had previous rap sheets, don’t it?):

Sometimes a Picture Suggests a Story. . .

Sometimes a Picture Suggests a Story. . .

Checking my referral logs today, I came across this (click for full size):


The referring URL was a post at Something… and Half of Something from July of last year. Entitled Gay Rights, it linked to a piece I wrote about where a self-described gay liberal had his own epiphany and decided to purchase a gun for self-defense. The reader of that piece then clicked through to my post, Ignorance = Fear. Education is the Key. Interestingly, though, his next click was to my earlier post, “(I)t’s most important that all potential victims be as dangerous as they can,” and when he left the site, it was to visit Publicola’s list of people who offer an introduction to shooting.

Unfortunately the reader was in Amsterdam.

Now, putting together the scant evidence, I am led to the conclusion that this reader is probably gay, and probably worried. As reported by GayPatriot, assaults on gays in Amsterdam have been increasing, and increasingly brazen, but they’re being downplayed in the media. A 2005 post at Modern Tribalist details a first-hand account of such a beating, with (broken) links to more. The blog Narcissistic Views on News/Politics reports: Amsterdam Now World Leader in anti-Gay Violence.

I wonder if my reader was a recent victim, or nearly one, and has had his own Awakening?

I have no idea what the laws are in the Netherlands with respect to firearms for self-defense, but somehow I doubt they’re very “liberal” (in the original meaning of the term.)

Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

From the personal story of a 9/11 “Security Mom” (h/t SailorCurt), Anti Gun Rights to Pro Gun Rights–My conversion:

The tragedy at Virginia Tech was the final straw. I was not going to be a victim anymore. My children were not going to be victims anymore.

I took my first gun safety class, and I got my first concealed carry permit. Some people may be surprized that I have changed. I am surprized that some of them haven’t.

Can I get an “AMEN!”?

“Terrorist Rifles” Hot Sellers in Louisiana

“Terrorist Rifles” Hot Sellers in Louisiana

According to Outdoor Life:

We just got a call from Devline Rossell, a charter captain based out of Venice Louisiana. He was shopping in New Orleans to get some supplies before the arrival of Gustav (currently listed as a tropical storm that has left at least 22 dead in the Caribbean) and reported that the item most in demand was not food, clothing or shelter.

“I just left a sporting goods store and you would think that the number-one selling item would be plywood or potable water or gasoline right now,” he said. “Apparently it is AR-15s and .223 ammo. I watched at least 20 people buy AR-15s and cases of .223.”

RTWT.

(h/t: Instapundit)

THIS Outrage Hits Newsweek

THIS Outrage Hits Newsweek

Patti Davis, Ronald Reagan’s daughter, has penned a piece for Newsweek on last week’s botched heroically-executed raid on nefarious drug kingpin innocent Berwyn Heights, Md. mayor Cheye Calvo, his mother-in-law, and his two slavering pit bulls Black Labs.

Entitled America’s Troubled House, I strongly urge you to give it a read. Here are some of of the highlights:

Mayor Cheye Calvo came home late in the afternoon of July 29 and discovered a package addressed to his wife that had been left at the front door. He brought it inside, didn’t open it and set it aside for his wife. Calvo said hello to his mother-in-law, Georgia, who lives with them, and took the family’s two black Labrador retrievers, Chase and Payton, out for a walk. He waved to several people who were sitting in cars near his home, never suspecting that a nightmare was about to unfold.

When he came back, Calvo went upstairs to change clothes for an evening event. His mother-in-law was in the kitchen when she saw masked men with guns running toward the house. Not surprisingly, she screamed as they kicked in the door. They shot Payton who was standing beside her. They then turned their weapons on the other black lab, Chase, who was running away from them. They killed him, too.

If you read the gun boards where incidents like this are reported regularly (which means, of course, they occur regularly), shooting the dogs seems to be standard operating procedure.

Mayor Calvo came downstairs into a new time in America, in which no one is presumed innocent and guilt is only an assumption away.

Several days after the raid, authorities arrested several men, including a FedEx delivery man. And County Police Chief Melvin C. High finally admitted that “Ms. Tomsic and the Calvo family were innocent victims of drug traffickers.”

He’s probably tired of reporters coming up to him with microphone in hand and saying, “You must be High.”

While Chief High later expressed regret for the incident, he stopped short of offering an apology. And Sheriff Michael A. Jackson, whose department executed the raid, defended his department’s actions.

It’s not the first time something like this has happened in Prince George’s County. In November, another family was targeted for what was later deemed a mistake. Their dog was shot to death in their front yard. When Calvo called for a U.S. Justice Department investigation last week, he noted “reports of similar misconduct, including service of warrants at the wrong address, excessive use of no-knock entries and other unjustified killings of family pets. This has happened before, and without oversight, it will happen again.” Calvo acknowledged that because of his position as mayor, his case has been getting the kind of exposure that the average citizen could never hope for. “What saddens us most is that all too often, these injustices go unnoticed by law-enforcement officials and those who are victimized are forced to suffer in silence,” he said.

Gee, Ya THINK??

Imagine being Georgia Porter, one minute cooking dinner, the next handcuffed on the kitchen floor, inches from the bloodied body of a dog who was part of her family. Imagine Cheye Calvo hearing the shots from upstairs, not knowing what was happening, and then finding himself handcuffed, helpless, forced to kneel in his underwear. Imagine Trinity Tomsic dealing with her defiled home–not only did the police slaughter their dogs, they tracked blood all over the house in a search that yielded nothing.

You need to imagine all these things because, in a way, we all live in that house. It’s called our country, and this is what’s starting to happen here.

It’s not starting, Patti, it’s been going on (and worse, much worse) for quite a while. The legacy media is just now starting to take notice, but that’s because media serves as the ecclesiastical arm of government, not as the fourth check and balance on government.

But here’s the key excerpt:

Prince George’s official country Web site defines itself as “a county of livable communities.” That’s what we all wish for–a livable community, a home where we feel safe. We want to feel that if the bad guys come, we can call the police and they will be the good guys. We want to believe that if we’re innocent, armed men with government badges won’t handcuff us and shoot our pets and wave their weapons in our faces.

But more and more of us don’t believe that.

A spot-on observation in a national news outlet.

By all means, read the comments, from the bottom up.

I’ve got another Überpost forming in my brain that isn’t going to crawl its way out of my skull until sometime after I get back from the Para Blogger’s shoot. I’m hoping nice long conversations with the other attendees will help inspire me in saying what I want to say the way I want to say it.

Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

Please overcome your irrational fear. Please find a range, and learn to shoot. Please try to buy a gun, if your jurisdiction allows, and find out how hard you’ve made it to exercise a fundamental human right, how hard you’ve made it to defend yourself against goblins who have never given two lumpy farts for your laws, your principles, or your feelings.

Please, please, please, learn that it’s OK to be free. – DJMoore, The Nonviolent Lie

RTWT

Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

I am lucky enough now to be able to say that yes, I do have a small purpose in my life, such as it is. I go to work, love my family and then, in my spare time, send some words out into the universe hoping that they will help a woman realize that yes, she is free – free enough to fight and be feminine at the same time. Free enough to choose to live.Breda

Connected?

Connected?

40% more seek license to carry concealed gun

AUSTIN — Demand for concealed-handgun licenses has risen nearly 40 percent in Texas in a year, an increase being attributed to many factors, even presidential politics.

While the exact cause may be unclear, what’s certain is the spike in applications has caught the Department of Public Safety unprepared. The state is taking a month longer than the 60 days allowed by law to process original applications and 80 days longer on renewals, which are supposed to be handled within 45 days.

“We’re trying really hard, but there have been delays because of the tremendous increase in applications,” said Tela Mange, a DPS spokeswoman.

She said the department is paying overtime and hiring temporary workers to reduce the backlog. Mange said she doesn’t know why applications last month were 39 percent higher than in April 2007.

And then there’s this:

Trigger Happy: Gun Shops See Sales Spike After Home Invasions

Gun sales in Connecticut jumped sharply after three members of a Cheshire family were killed in a brutal home invasion last summer, and they continue to run about 20 percent above last year’s rate.

Gun shop owners now say a second home invasion in March in New Britain, where a parolee shot two elderly women, killing one, during an attempted robbery, may be a tipping point as worried homeowners scramble to arm themselves.

“Those home invasions were the worst things in the world,” said James Cummings, owner of Center Sports in Columbia. “But it is the best thing for my business.”

J.D. McAulay, owner of the Connecticut Gun Exchange in Milford, said customer traffic rose noticeably after both crimes, but especially after the most recent one.

“We have had first-time buyers looking for protection that have no idea about the process or that there is a process,” McAulay said. “They don’t know they need a permit for a handgun or that they need to take a course.”

In the first three months of 2007, 16,651 guns were sold statewide. In the first quarter of 2008, that number jumped to 20,101. More guns were sold in the first three weeks of April than in the entire month last year.

The monthly reports of gun sales from the state Department of Public Safety show a spike in gun purchases beginning early last fall. That was just weeks after two parolees invaded the Petit family home in Cheshire, killed three and burned the house to the ground.

From May to September in 2007, statewide gun sales had reached 5,000 only once.

From October to March, the lowest total was 6,185 in February. And that figure for February was 25 percent higher than a year earlier.

Zendo Deb (where I got the second link) wonders if this is evidence that we’re really not in a recession, and one gun shop owner thinks the entire increase in sales is due to the heinous home invasion, but here’s what one San Antonio CCW trainer thinks:

But Ross Bransford, who trains 1,000 Texans a year to qualify for a concealed handgun license, said he believes the looming 2008 election is a big factor.

“People are not sure what’s going to happen after the election,” said Bransford, who owns Austin-based CHL-Texas.com. “Both Democratic candidates are anti-gun in one fashion or another.”

I think that has a LOT to do with it. Other reasons:

Other instructors mentioned an increased interest from young adults after last year’s Virginia Tech massacre and recent changes in Texas law about carrying concealed weapons.

In 2007, lawmakers granted privacy to the 258,000 license holders by closing records that had been public since the concealed handgun law passed in 1995. They also extended the so-called “castle doctrine” defense to persons who use a gun to protect their vehicles, in addition to their homes.

But you don’t need a CCW to keep a gun in your home for self-defense in Texas. Then again, probably most people in Connecticut don’t know you need to take a training class and get a permit to purchase a pistol there, either:

While the home invasions have prompted the General Assembly to pass a $10 million crime bill — which Gov. M. Jodi Rell threatened veto for budget reasons — residents are taking personal steps.

“(Gun sales) are starting to go up because people are scared,” said Scott Hoffman, owner of Hoffman’s Gun Center in Newington and president of the Connecticut Association of Firearms Retailers.

The tag line for Hoffman’s store is “Guns For The Good Guys.”

His store has focused more on defense weapons than hunting rifles. He said the media coverage of the home invasions has pushed his sales higher.

“It’s unfortunate that it takes a tragedy, but that is usually how it works,” Hoffman said.

All three gun store owners declined to discuss the revenues their businesses generate.

But Hoffman and Cummings noted shifts in their customer base and growing interest in pistol permit courses.

Hoffman said he used to hold his pistol course every other week. Now it’s held weekly, and there are waiting lists for a month’s worth of classes.

That’s why I label these posts “Awakenings” – reality smacks people in the face, and some of them wake up.

Cummings, who’s sold guns for 26 years, said he’s used to serving hunters looking for rifles but that his new clientele(sic) is a different breed.

“Instead of the hunters, we get a lot of older people, older women, coming in for the (pistol) class,” he said.

“I don’t think an old lady wants a pistol permit to hunt,” Cummings added.

Shotguns are also favorites for those looking to protect their homes. For one thing, they’re less complicated to obtain.

Pistols require coursework, a 90-day wait and about $200 in miscellaneous permit and training costs.

The wait for a shotgun is about two weeks.

More menacing looking semi-automatic assault rifles, knockoffs of the M-16 or AK-47, are also increasingly popular.

Yes, they’re only good for killing a large number of people indiscriminately which is why the Chicago PD is among the latest departments to equip with with them.

Right?

But even in Connecticut, the upcoming election is seen as a major driver of gun sales:

Politics is definitely a factor in rising gun sales, he added.

“Politicians have been my best salesmen for 20 years because people want what they can’t have,” he said. “They are afraid their rights are going to be taken away.”

Hoffman pointed to a possible change in gun policy coming from the next president in 2009 or other legislation from the state Capitol.

Two bills referred to the state judiciary committee this year would have required firearm manufactures to micro-stamp all guns with information and engrave ammunition with serial numbers.

But the Eeeeeevil NRA intervened!

In response, the National Rifle Association put out a call to its constituents.

A March press conference on the issue drew eight executives from gun manufacturers and two trade associations.

Both pieces of legislation eventually died in committee, as the companies argued they would force factories out of state and cost the state jobs.

That’s right – Connecticut is home for several firearms manufacturers. And of course, we have to hear from the concerned citizens who oppose the nefarious NRA:

Those opposed to gun violence, specifically the non-profit Connecticut Against Gun Violence, want to prevent the flow of guns purchased legally from reaching the hands of criminals.

“As long as dealers are following state law, we don’t really have a comment about increasing gun sales,” said Lisa Labella, executive director for CAGV.

“We respect the rights of law-abiding gun dealers and owners. We don’t believe that a gun is the best form of home defense. We would prefer more security systems instead.”

Go ahead. Pull my other leg.

And, killing two birds with one stone, so to speak, here’s today’s Quote of the Day:

“Politicians have been my best salesmen for 20 years because people want what they can’t have. They are afraid their rights are going to be taken away.”

Unintended consequences.

Another Awakening.

Check this story out (via Instapundit)

Anonymous Hackers Track Saboteur, Find and Punish the Wrong Guy

Anti-Scientology agitators have repeatedly harassed and threatened violence against a 59-year-old PG&E worker and his wife, who were mistakenly flagged as pro-Scientology hackers.

John Lawson, who lives in Stockton, California with his wife Julia, began receiving threatening phone calls around 2 a.m. Saturday morning. He didn’t know why until THREAT LEVEL explained that a hacking group calling itself the g00ns (goons spelled with zeros, not goons with the letter o) posted his home address, phone number and cell numbers, as well as Julia’s Social Security number, online. The obscene and threatening calls have continued through Tuesday, according to Lawson.

The calls are just one small offshoot of an ongoing, larger attack on the Church of Scientology by a ragtag group of internet troublemakers who call themselves Anonymous. The group says it is targeting Scientology in part for its use of litigation to suppress unflattering documents on the internet.

Over the weekend, the g00ns thought they had caught a hacker who had busted into a server being used to help coordinate the online attacks and real world protests against Scientology. But Lawson says the callers have the wrong guy.

“I don’t even really know how to use a computer,” Lawson said.

His phone just keeps ringing, Lawson said, and when he answers, callers spout vulgarities and threats and then hang up. On Monday, he got a call that seemed to originate from the Virgin Islands. The caller threatened to kill him.

“They have got the wife really scared because they have my address,” Lawson said. “I think I am going to buy me a gun today just in case.”

Think he’ll be surprised about the 10-day waiting period and the difficulty near-impossibility of getting a concealed-carry permit?

A Girl’s Guide to Firearms

An interesting piece at CO-ED Magazine, by that same title. Excerpts:

I could have cared less about firing a gun.

Growing up, even on the mean streets of New Jersey, I had never even seen a gun, fire arm, pistol, or whatever you want to call it except for television and movies. It wasn’t that my family was against weapons or the right to bare(sic) arms, we just didn’t bare arms. So when it came time to act interested, I had to do just that: ACT.

But being familiar with fire arms and pistols is something that is very important and every woman should know. Not only can it be thrilling to fire a gun but it is also very empowering.

(Emphasis mine.)

Together, we’ve gone to the range often. To find a range near you look here. Honestly, it surprises me to say, but I am even considering buying a gun myself. To see the laws in your state look here. In some states it takes a long time to buy a gun, which can be good or bad.

Something probably needs to change since there are so many nut cases carrying guns on college campuses these days. Still, as much as the government wants us to feel safe, I think I would definitely feel safer if I had a gun like Dirty Harry. I sit in my classes, and in the back of my mind, I think of how I am going to get out of the room if I hear shots from the hallway.

I’ve actually contemplated taking classes only on the first floor so I have a quick getaway. I’m not saying that I would want to carry a gun with me to class but at least if the campus security carried something other then a flashlight and a cup of coffee, I might feel safer. I don’t think I’m alone or crazy in my thoughts, but even if I am so what, I don’t think it is too much to have an expectation of making it safely through my classes each day.

RTWT.

Education. Isn’t it wonderful?