The Armed Citizen® March 29, 2012

Early one morning, a resident awoke to the sound of someone shuffling around inside his home. He grabbed his gun and proceeded to search the premises and discovered a man hiding in his basement. The resident fired two rounds from his firearm striking the suspect both times. The injured suspect reached his vehicle and fled the scene. The suspect was later hospitalized; in his wounded state he had struck several parked cars and then crashed the vehicle about a block away. (Associated Press, FL, 12/21/11)

The Armed Citizen Extra
(The following account did not appear in the print version of American Rifleman.)
A supermarket employee was stunned one evening when a man walked into the store, held a sharp object to her back and demanded money. The suspect forced the employee into the store's office, but he wasn't prepared for what would happen next. Another employee was waiting there with a gun and fired a shot at the suspect, striking him. The would-be robber later died in the hospital. (The Courrier-Journal, Indianapolis, IN, 12/28/11)

From The Armed Citizen Archives
March 1975: Aroused at 5 a.m., Mrs. Estelle Beavan, 61, a Seattle widow, found a young man "tearing up the whole front of the house." She telephoned police. But when the man, after ripping off a storm door, bashed through a thick double-locked door, Mrs. Beavan fired one shot at about 10 ft. with a small .22 handgun that she had bought on the advice of a "relative in law enforcement." A bullet in the chest halted the intruder. Police said he was crazed by drugs. (The Seattle Times, Seattle, Wash.)

Share |

Comments

ADD YOUR COMMENT

Enter your comments below, they will appear within 24 hours


Your Name


Your Email


Your Comment

7 Responses to The Armed Citizen® March 29, 2012

Terry wrote:
April 07, 2012

take a bite out of crime.... shoot first

Ralf wrote:
April 05, 2012

Better to be tried by 12 than to be carried by 6. My CrossBreed is always filled !

Former Victim wrote:
April 04, 2012

Note to Roy, Statistically, "these scenarios" happen to very few people, so the "gun haters" and the "anti-violence" politicians don't want the rest of us to have firearms. HOWEVER, if one of "these scenarios" happens to "YOU" or your family, "statistics" don't matter. I was a statistic in New York City (robbery, kidnapping, home invasion) and a statistic in Hawaii (robbery). Both states have highly restrictive gun laws. Now I live in a "shall issue" state; belong to a competitive shooting gun club, shoot at the range once a month, and do some fast draw out in the forest when I walk my dog. I have lived here longer than I lived in NYC or Hawaii and - surprise - have not been assaulted or robbed. I most sincerely hope I will never be put in a position where I have to draw my handgun to defend myself and I take precautions to avoid that possibility (time of day I go out, big loud dog in the house, avoiding known crime areas). BUT, if I AM put in the position where I have to use the firearm, I will; and unless I meet Bonnie and Clyde or Billy the Kid, chances are very good I'll be reversing the "statistics". Next time a "gun-hater" tells you that you don't need a firearm, ask them if they have personally been assaulted by an armed assailant.

EricT wrote:
April 03, 2012

I love these stories too. Armed law abiding citizens do not look for trouble but if a criminal is looking to harm or kill them they are ready to deal with the problem.

MitchN60 wrote:
April 02, 2012

I love reading about armed Americans prevailing over the low-life elements in this country.

Jimbo96 wrote:
April 02, 2012

Way to go for everyone who lawfully uses a firearm to protect themselves from a violent act of another. I am alive today only because I was armed one night when attacked by two miscreants with a a club and knife. I was clubbed in the head and stabbed in the side and back. I shot and killed the one who clubbed me in the head, and the one who stabbed me was convicted of murder in the first degree, attempted murder and attempted armed robbery, making CA case law that any death relating to the commission of a felony is murder in the first degree. Anyhow, it was impossible to get a concealed weapon license in CA, but every cop in town knew that I carried, but because of the idiotic politically correctness of the chief at the time, nobody got one. Good thing that I didn't care I was technically breaking the law, because I am now alive. The kid who tried to kill me with the club is dead and no longer able to harm another, and he had harmed many others in the prior 4 years of his criminal career. He had escaped from juvenile hall from prior felony convictions for armed robbery. Even though it's been 40 years since it happened it's still a fresh memory. Glad I am alive and the miscreant little drit isn't. I feel I saved hundreds of people the misery of meeting him, and quite possibly several lives as well. He was thought to have engineered the escape from juvenile hall and was said to have beat and tortured kids while there. Had dozens or burglaries, and five armed robberies on his record already, and was going for my murder to add to it. Hope that more people save themselves and more miscreants die trying.

Roy wrote:
April 02, 2012

I'd like to know how many gun haters out there would have handled these scenarios. But how these three handled it was OUTSTANDING! Criminals and other bad people need to understand that an armed citizen is not one to mess with.