Posted on 12/23/2024 12:50:45 PM PST by grundle
A gutsy Bronx bodega owner is defending himself against weapons charges after using a gun he says he found in his deli against a pair of masked armed robbers who were trying to stick up the place on Thanksgiving Day.
Jhony Gomez, who has operated Mi Gerizin Market in Melrose for 13 years, said he was shocked when he found a firearm abandoned in the rest room trash can early last Thursday when he opened his store for business.
Gomez, 57, told supporters that he intended to turn the weapon over to authorities later in the day on his way to church.
He ended up using the gun instead.
“He acted in a moment of terror to protect his life, his customers and his employees from armed robbers,” said Fernando Mateo, a spokesman for the United Bodegas of America.
According to Mateo, two masked gunmen stormed into the Elton Ave. bodega shortly after 9:15 a.m. demanding cash, telling everyone to go to the back of the store and lie on the floor.
Gomez told cops that, thinking quickly, he retrieved the gun he had found just a couple of hours earlier and fired several shots at the bandits, wounding one of them in the foot.
The bodega owner said he feared for his life and for the safety of the customers in the store. But now he’s telling supporters he’s afraid again — that justice won’t be served.
According to officials, the wounded alleged robber was later arrested, treated and then released. Gomez, meanwhile, was in court Wednesday facing charges of criminal possession of a weapon and criminal possession of ammunition.
“We don’t understand the system,” Mateo said. “The system is failing all New Yorkers, all of us. The fact that those robbers are free while Jhony is being prosecuted is an injustice that no New Yorker should tolerate.”
Mateo said Gomez opened his bodega at 6 a.m. on Thanksgiving Day.
“A day when most people are home with their families, this man came to his bodega, opened it up,” he said.
While routinely checking out the bathroom, Gomez found a gun, Mateo said.
“He can’t close the store and run out when he’s busy,” Mateo explained. “He holds the gun, hopefully, to return it later in the day to his police precinct on his way to church.”
Mateo said Gomez, who was working behind the counter at the time, used the gun because he feared for his life and the lives of his customers.
Gomez, a husband and father of four, surrendered to police Tuesday.
“How do you go from being a hero to going to jail?” Mateo said. “The ones who are not criminals are the ones who are being persecuted. They are the ones being held accountable for the crimes other people commit.”
Mateo said he asked Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark to drop the charges against Gomez.
“He doesn’t deserve to be in jail,” Mateo said. “He deserves to get a proclamation from the mayor of the City of New York for saving lives.”
According to Mateo, Gomez was charged with possession of a gun and ammunition at Wednesday’s court hearing and was released without bail.
If that’s his story about the gun, so be it. What would you do in the same situation? Knowing that law-enforcement goes after law abiding citizens, instead of the scum criminals, I’d buy a throwaway gun too. Then deny it was mine if I had to shoot somebody robbing my business.
Why was it criminal posession??
Its illegal to NOT let robbers rob or kill you in NY.
No.
Do I care?
No.
Do I find this template of "protect the criminal, prosecute the victim" very familiar?
Why yes. Yes, I do.
People who think it is about "race" need to understand that it goes much deeper. If you are a victim who fights back, no matter your skin shade, sex or ethnic background, you will be prosecuted and your attacker set free.
That is what they have done repeatedly.
“Follow the SSSU rule.”
Is that “Shoot, Shovel. and Shut Up”?
That is my way of dealing with criminals.
Also when you shoot, you aim at center mass.
If it is important enough to shoot someone, you
shoot to stop them not just piss them off.
He must sell cannoli. Obviously, a customer took the cannoli and left a gun.
Long ago, for all of 1970 and half of 1971 I lived in Chicago and regularly commuted on the CTA elevated trains. At the time Chicago was ruled by Richard I daily. There may have been a bit of crime on the CTA then but precious little. Very different from New York, and probably Chicago, today.
Liberal politicians are soft on criminals as a professional courtesy.
Oh, in the same situation I would hope find within myself the will to use the weapon in exactly the same way that he did, and I’d be thankful for it having shown up in my trash can in the same way that this one did for him.
It’s like providential, man.
I have no reason to doubt his story, nor do I even know anything about any throwaway guns. What does that term even mean?
What did I say that you were able to construe otherwise? :)
Sure seems that way...
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