How Long Does it
Take
to Die?
Robert
A. Waters
One of the
arguments the gun-banners use is that victims of crime should call
police and let the authorities handle the situation. As James Brady
said, "For defense of the home--that's why we have police
departments."
An examination of two cases, however, would seem to put the lie to
that statement.
On July 16, 2000, a woman at Greenwood Village Apartments in Denver,
Colorado did just what Brady recommended. At 8:40 p.m., she dialed
911. Although she was unable to speak when dispatchers answered,
they could hear sounds of a struggle. Because the apartment's
address didn't show up in the 911 system, it took eight minutes for
police to find the location of the call.
When they arrived, officers found a man with a bloody knife standing
over a dead woman. In another room, a three-year-old child was
screaming. The murderer, a rejected lover, had attacked and killed
his former girlfriend sometime during the eight minutes it took
police to arrive.
Contrast that with the following case.
This is the actual transcript of a 911 call from Maria Pittaras to
the Pasco County, Florida Emergency Communication Center. The call
came in at 1:51 a.m., August 10, 2000.
Dispatcher: "911."
Pittaras: "I just shot a man, a man was just in my house, and
tried raping me, and I shot him, oh my God." (Gasping for
breath.)
Dispatcher: "Ma'am."
Pittaras: (Unintelligible screams.) "He's still alive! Come
quick."
Dispatcher: "Ma'am, calm down."
Pittaras: "He's still alive. I heard him in there."
Disptacher: "All right, what's the address?"
(Pittaras tells the dispatcher her address.)
Dispatcher: "You say a man broke into your house?"
Pittaras: "Yes. Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God! I heard him in
there!"
Dispatcher: "All right. What kind of a gun is it?"
Pittaras: "I don't know. I don't know. Oh my God. Oh my God.
How long will it take for the police to get here? Oh my God."
Dispatcher: "We're getting an ambulance on the way over there
right now."
Pittaras: "Please hurry, he's still alive, he's going to come
back after me."
Dispatcher: "All right, stay on the phone. I'm going to put you
through to the Sheriff's Office, okay?"
According to the St. Petersburg Times, Robert Metz broke into Maria
Pittaras's home through a guest bedroom window. A family man who
lived a few doors down, he pulled a nylon mask over his face, and
climbed on top of the sleeping woman. Pressing a knife to her
throat, Metz threatened to rape her.
Pittaras reached into a night-stand and pulled out a loaded
.38-caliber revolver. In her panic, she fired a shot into the wall.
Then she pressed the gun against the intruder's neck and squeezed
the trigger. Although Pittaras didn't know it at the time, Metz died
almost instantly.
It was only moments later that the frightened woman's 911 call came
in.
"How long will it take police to get here?" Pittaras asked
the dispatcher. The question hung in the air, a plaintive plea for
someone to come fix the problem. But the police had not been there
when the attack began, and it would be ten more minutes before they
would arrive.
Maria Pittaras had been left alone to fix her own problem.
Forutnately, unlike the woman in Denver, she had a gun and knew how
to use it.
Let's examine what Pittaras's options would have been had she not
had a gun.
When she awoke with the masked man on top of her pressing a knife to
her throat, she could have tried to talk her way out of the
situation. Those odds aren't good, of course, but they're better
than nothing.
Or Pittaras could have meekly submitted and prayed that her
assailant wouldn't kill her. Indeed, that's one of the alternatives
recommended by many so-called experts. If you give in, they say,
maybe the assailant will let you live. It's better to suffer the
trauma of having been violated than to fight back. In this case, as
in many others, submtting would almost certainly have been a death
sentence since her attacker was a neighbor who would have feared
being recognized.
Pittaras could have fought back with her hands, or pepper spray, or
some other weapon. This would have undoubtedly enraged her assaiant,
causing him to inflict even more harm on her.
The gun-banners' best solution for surviving violent confrontations
is to call the police. But that was obviously not an option in this
case. Had Pittaras even had a telephone next to her, Metz would have
physically restrained her as she attempted to call for help.
None of the above options offered any real portection to Maria
Pittaras.
What does offer protection to rape victims, or victims of domestic
violence, or victims of assault?
Guns.
A few days after killing Metz, a Times reporter inteivewed Pittaras.
"I understand that I did what I had to do," she said.
"But I'm never going to be a normal person again. Every day I'm
going to have to come to terms [with the fact] that I took a man's
life, a man with a family."
Pittaras paused, then continued, "I know I'll get past this,
but I'll never forget it. And I don't think I'll ever stop wondering
why it had to happen."
Unlike the victim in Denver, Maria Pittaras survived.
But sometimes survival isn't pretty.
Source:
Sierra
Times
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