Newsgroups: talk.politics.guns
From: [c r philli] at [hound.edaca.ingr.com] (Ron Phillips)
Subject: Armed Citizen - Dec. '93
Date: Wed, 1 Dec 1993 15:49:41 GMT

THE ARMED CITIZEN
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Studies indicate that firearms are used over 1 million times a
year for personal protection, and that presence of a firearm,
without a shot being fired, prevents crime in many instances.
Shooting usually can be justified only where crime constitutes an
immediate, imminent threat to life or limb, or, in some cases,
property.  Anyone is free to quote or reproduce these accounts.
Send clippings to: "The Armed Citizen," 470 Spring Park Place,
Suite 1000, Herndon, Va. 22070.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

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   Connie Crowe was roused to action one evening when she heard
sounds of a struggle and screams coming from her upstairs
neighbor's Franklin, Tennessee, apartment.  Crowe grabbed a
revolver given to her by her father and went into the hall where
she confronted an intruder.  When he came rushing down the steps,
Crowe ordered him to stop, and, when he didn't, shot and wounded
him.  "I thought 'he's not getting out of here if my neighbor's
up there dead,'" Crowe said.  Police said Crowe would not be
charged.  The wounded man faced an attempted rape charge.
	(The Tennessean, Nashville, TN, 10/06/93)
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   Stalked and assaulted by a former boyfriend, Terry Jackson of
Albany, Georgia, feared for her life even though she had sworn
out arrest warrants for the man.  Deciding she needed more 
protection than the police could give her, the mother of five
purchased a pistol at a pawnshop.  Less than 12 hours later, 
Jackson shot and killed the man as he tried to break into her 
home.  Police arrested and charged her with murder, but the
district attorney ordered her release, saying "It does seem to be
a clear-cut case of self-defense.  If there had been any question
in the facts I was given, I would not have acted so quickly."
	(The Herald, Albany, GA, 10/06/93)
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   Picking the same house to burglarize twice in an hour proved
fatal for a thief in Kansas City, Missouri.  Alerted to the
first attempt, the owner of the home, a Kansas City woman, was at
the house when the man tried again.  Hearing a noise, the woman
investigated, found the man, and fired several shots from her
pistol, mortally wounding the intruder, who turned out to be the
woman's cousin, a convicted burglar.
	(The Star, Kansas City, MO, 08/24/93)
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   It was something of a comical situation.  The 300-lb.
"customer" was holding a 2" knife, while the Colorado Springs
liquor-store clerk was holding a gun.  It all started when the
man asked for a bottle of wine, then pulled a knife instead of
cash, prompting the clerk to grab one of the handguns kept in the
store.  After a brief standoff during which he put the knife away
and tried to make friends, the hefty would-be crook left empty-
handed.
	(The Gazette Telegraph, Colorado Springs, CO 08/28/93)
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   "I'm just tired of people getting away with crime," was
Jeffrey Rosenberg's assessment of why he kept a vigil over his
new Ford Mustang.  Getting two pistols, Rosenberg, of Quincy,
Massachusetts, kept his six-hour watch over the car.  When he
confronted two men checking out the car, one took a swipe at him
with a screwdriver, and Rosenberg drew his handgun and held them
at gunpoint for police.
	(The Sun, Lowell, MA, 07/25/93)
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   "I knew I had only one thing to do, and that was to go for my
gun," said Menlo Park, California, grocery-store-owner John
Pacheco, who was forced to shoot and kill an armed robber in his
store.  The crook entered, pulled a pistol and demanded money,
prompting Pacheco to grab a .45 from under the counter and fire.
The dead man had a long criminal history and was on parole for a
firearms offense.
	(The Chronicle, San Francisco, CA 07/23/93)
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   Emile Shermer, 82, was in his Fairhope, Alabama, home when a
teenager broke in and tried to rob him at knifepoint.  Instead of
complying with the delinquent's demands for cash, Shermer pulled
a pistol and shot him in the arm, then held him for police.
	(The Press Register, Baldwin, AL, 08/09/93)
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   A Lexington, Kentucky, man had the competition seriously
outgunned and didn't hesitate to prove it.  Finding a man trying
to break into his car in a parking lot, he ordered the burglar to
stop.  Instead of complying, the would-be thief pointed a small
pistol at the car owner, who pulled his .45 and shot the gunman
in the stomach.
	(The Herald-Leader, Lexington, KY, 08/10/93)
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   Carl Spence jumped to action upon finding a strange pickup
truck in his driveway and two strangers walking around his
Jackson, Mississippi, area home.  Spence blocked the truck with
his car, ran into the house and called 911.  He then grabbed his
shotgun and went back outside, where the pair was trying to 
escape. They stopped and waited for police when they saw Spence's
shotgun.
	(The Clarion-Ledger, Jackson, MS, 09/11/93)
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   Win Coburn of Bloomfield, Missouri, returned home to find
three men--wanted by a police dragnet--ransacking his residence.
Two of the fugitives fled, but Coburn held the third at gunpoint
until police collected him.  His accomplices were also captured.
"We believe these arrests may have cleared up to 10 burglaries in
surrounding counties," said Stoddard County Sheriff Steve Fish.
	(The Daily Statesman, Dexter, MO, 08/03/93)
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   A 14-year-old San Francisco boy proved more than a match for a
gunman who, along with a man armed with a knife, forced his way
into the family home.  The criminal ran upstairs to confront and
demand money from the boy's parents.  Pulling his own gun, the
father was shot in the chest and dropped the pistol as he
struggled with his assailant.  The boy ran upstairs, grabbed the
family gun and killed his father's attacker.  The other man fled.
	(The Chronicle, San Francisco, CA 09/09/93)
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-- 
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* Ron Phillips                 [c r philli] at [hound.edaca.ingr.com] *
* Senior Customer Engineer                                   *
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