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The
Self Defense Files:
True
Stories of Armed Self-Defense
for January, 2001
Robert
A. Waters
published:
02.01.01
This
month brought numerous reminders of why many Americans own guns. But
these stories were nowhere to be seen on ABC, CBS, CNN, or NBC. They
weren't news to editors of the New York Times, the Washington Post,
or the Los Angeles Times.
Overlooked by the mainstream media, these accounts show how lives
are saved when law-abiding citizens own firearms.
Forty-five home invasions occurred in Chattanooga, Tennessee between
October, 2000 and January, 2001. But on the night of January 12, the
home invasions came to an abrupt end. Two masked gunmen burst
through the door of Tiffany Bibbs's home. When the mother, who was
holding her baby, attempted to dial 911, one of the robbers knocked
the phone out of her hands. Then the assailants forced the four
occupants of the house to give up their money and jewelry. As they
were leaving, one of the intruders snatched Bibbs's baby from her
arms and ran outside. Gerald Lamar Beverly, a visitor in the home,
grabbed a handgun and followed the robbers. The assailant placed the
baby on the porch and began shooting at Beverly. The visitor
returned fire. When police arrived, Beverly and an armed neighbor
were standing over the body of Mica Kaba Townsend. Beverly was not
charged. There have been no more home invasions reported in
Chattanooga since January 12.
On January 11, in Atlanta, Christopher Quilling and his girlfriend
were relaxing at home when three armed men kicked down the back door
and entered. As the intruders attempted to rob the couple,
Quilling's Rotweiller attacked one of the gunmen. This gave the
homeowner time to retrieve his own 9mm semiautomatic pistol. In a
furious gunbattle, one robber was killed and a second was taken to a
local hospital where he was listed in critical condition. Quilling,
who was shot in the leg, was released from the hospital the same
night. Police ruled the shooting self-defense.
On January 16, Cumberland County, Tennessee restaurant owner Spiro
Poulos shot two armed robbers. Wearing ski masks, they entered his
pizzaria and held a pistol to his head. When the men demanded money,
Poulos pulled his own gun and fired four times. One of the robbers
was hit, and the other fled. The business owner, according to
police, acted in self-defense.
On January 19, a grotesque series of events ended the life of an
Akron, Ohio armed robber. Saleh Husein, owner of Kelly's Mini Mart,
was working the counter when David Id-Deen entered the store, pulled
a gun, and ordered the business owner to "freeze." Husein,
whose brother had been murdered by a robber a year before, retrieved
his own handgun and blasted four shots at Id-Deen, grazing his head.
The robber panicked, dropped his weapon, and fled. Running into the
street outside the store, Id-Deen was struck by an oncoming car and
died of a broken neck. Husein was not charged.
In other cases, an armed man in Houston was shot and killed while
attempting to rob a car stereo shop; the manager of a bar in Phoenix
shot and killed one of four robbers; a homeowner in Portsmouth,
Virginia shot a teenager who tried to break into his home; a store
clerk in Tulsa, Oklahoma killed an armed robber; and a Phoenix
father shot and killed a man who forced his way into the home.
And so it goes.
On January 26, a Merrillville, Indiana man used his handgun to save
himself and his wife. His daughter's boyfriend, upset because the
parents intended to move to Texas, threatened Thor Moody and his
wife with a semiautomatic pistol. The Moodys ran to their bedroom
and slammed the door shut. When the teen began shooting through the
door, Moody grabbed a handgun and returned fire, driving the
boyfriend from the house. The teen was quickly arrested. Thor Moody
was treated for a minor wound to the arm and released from the
hospital that night. No charges were filed against Moody.
On the afternoon of January 27, Johnny Tyson, attempted to rob Lin's
Super Market in Savannah, Georgia. Tyson struck store owner Xiao
Ming Lin in the face with a brick, knocking him to the floor. The
robber then jumped the counter and attempted to open the cash
drawer. Lin's son, also working at the store, drew a .38-caliber
revolver and opened fire, killing Tyson. Major Willie Lovett of the
Savannah Police Department refused to file charges against the
owner's son. "People have the right to protect their property
and themselves," he said.
On January 28, at 3:30 a.m., a teenager entered the business office
of the Spenard Motel in Anchorage, Alaska. Holding a gun to the head
of the clerk, he demanded money. The robber became agitated when he
didn't get the amount he wanted. The clerk, thinking he would be
killed by the gunman, pulled his own handgun and shot the robber
five times. The clerk was not charged. The same could not be said
for the robber.
These are just a few cases of armed self-defense that went
unreported by the mainstream media in January, 2001. Because of this
shameful neglect, many Americans have a distorted view of guns. The
media will never convince people of their fairness and objectivity
until they begin to cover these stories.
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