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Self Defense |
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Man successfully defends home
against four invaders
By
Jim Hannah
Publication date: April 28, 2001
GREENWOOD, KENTUCKY — One man is dead and another was in critical
condition with two gunshot wounds to the head after an apparent home
invasion early Friday in rural Pendleton County.
Justin Davis, 24, called 911 at 5:40 a.m. and said he shot at four men
attempting to break into his trailer, according to Kentucky State
Police. When Pendleton County sheriff's deputies arrived, they found
one man dead.
The dead man was identified late Friday by Kentucky State Police as
Robert E. Gibson Jr., 23, of Cincinnati. Police had no address for Mr.
Gibson.
A second man showed up at the Falmouth police station, shot twice in
the head. He was driven there by a third man who allegedly was trying
to break into the trailer.
The fourth man, at the trailer three-quarters of a mile from the main
road, was left with no vehicle and Mr. Davis firing at him, police
said. That man was seen banging on doors and windows of homes up and
down Portland-Greenwood Road, asking for a ride.
The man, wearing a T-shirt, khaki pants and green socks, offered
17-year-old James Peters $200-$300 for a ride to neighboring Bracken
County.
“His pants were ripped and it looked like he had ran through mud,” the
Pendleton County High School sophomore said. “He didn't show me any
cash. I was getting suspicious.”
James said his mother called police from the house and the mysterious
man wanting a ride was picked up by a sheriff's cruiser.
The man shot twice in the head is Pat O'Brien, 47, of Newport. He was
in critical but stable condition at University Hospital, a nursing
supervisor said.
The two other men who were allegedly breaking into the trailer were
being questioned at the Pendleton County Sheriff's Office on Friday
evening. State police wouldn't identify them, but James Peters
described the man wanting a ride as being in his early 20s with a bald
head.
No one had been charged with any crimes as of Friday night.
Mr. Davis rented the trailer about two months ago, said Landon
Caldwell, the son of the couple who own the trailer.
Mr. Caldwell's parents own more than 400 acres in Pendleton County.
The farm has been in the Caldwell family for at least three
generations.
The trailer sits away from Portland-Greenwood Road. The narrow and
curvy road is about 6 miles from Butler.
Mr. Caldwell said his family didn't know Mr. Davis before they rented
him the trailer. They didn't know whether others lived at the trailer
with Mr. Davis, but they did confirm he owned several dogs, believed
to be pit bulls.
“We pretty much stay out of his business,” said Mr. Caldwell, who was
staying at his parents' home, 1 1/4 miles away on the same farm.
“Kind of makes you wonder about the safety of our home,” James Peters
said. “If they were trying to break in and rob him, who might be
next?”
Source: The Cincinnati Enquirer |
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"No free man
[or woman]
shall ever be debarred the use of arms."
-Thomas Jefferson |
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