Ah, two different issues: 1) Assaulting a kid, bad move. 2) Parent and kid using a pool that is not theirs. Also a bad move. Property owner should review how they let people into the pool area and call police when someone violates and won’t leave on their own. Again, my problem is the adult employee assaulting the kid.
You just keep siding with anarchy. Just remember you are going to deserve everything that follows.
Not the same as this story but a pool invader one. Note his son was in FBI agent, too.
Civil Rights leader and influential columnist and talk show panelist Carl Rowan gained public notoriety on June 14, 1988, when he shot an unarmed teenage trespasser, Ben Smith.
“The interloper was a near-naked teenager who had been skinny-dipping with friends in Rowan’s pool, and the columnist’s weapon was an unregistered, and thus illegal, .22 caliber pistol.”
From People magazine: “When Rowan heard the police arrive, he stepped outside to let them in. It was then, he says, that he was confronted by “a tall man who was smoking something that I absolutely was sure was marijuana.”
Rowan says he repeatedly warned the intruder that he was armed and would shoot.
“My first words were: ‘Freeze! Stay where you are!’ “ says Rowan. “Then I said, ‘I have a gun.’ “ Rowan says the man kept coming and that he finally felt forced to shoot in self-defense. He says he aimed at the intruder’s feet but hit him in the wrist when the man lunged forward.
The intruder, Chevy Chase, Maryland, teenager Benjamin Smith, 18, tells a different story. “I was in my underwear,” he told a radio interviewer. “I just climbed out of the pool. It was pretty innocent. I never spoke with him. He just shot me and closed the door and went back hiding in his house. I mean, I guess I was trespassing. But that’s no reason to shoot a person, is it? For swimming in their pool?”
Rowan was charged for firing a gun that he did not legally own. Rowan was arrested and tried. During the trial, he argued that he had the right to use whatever means necessary to protect himself and his family. He also said the pistol he used was exempt from the District’s handgun prohibition law because it belonged to his older son, a former FBI agent.
He was accused of hypocrisy, since Rowan was a strict gun control advocate.
In a 1981 column, he advocated “a law that says anyone found in possession of a handgun except a legitimate officer of the law goes to jail—period.” In 1985, he called for “A complete and universal federal ban on the sale, manufacture, importation and possession of handguns (except for authorized police and military personnel).
Rowan was tried but the jury was deadlocked; the judge declared a mistrial and he was never retried.
Probably called the police multiple times and they did nothing.