Posted on 02/05/2012 7:25:03 AM PST by marktwain
To state the obvious not to mention ripping off and paraphrasing one of Hollywood's most memorable lines Curtis Foster was mad as heck when he saw an intruder leaving a neighbor's house, and he wasn't going to take it anymore.
At about noon on Jan. 11, Curtis was at home in northeastern Winston-Salem. It was raining, and Foster was watching television. He heard a small ruckus across the way at a home catty-corner to his and looked out the window to see what it was.
"I saw this guy step out of the house with a sack of stuff on his back like Santa Claus," Foster said.
So what to do? Shout at the man? Call 911 and wait? Stay inside and look the other way?
"I got my pistol out," Foster said matter-of-factly.
A strong protective streak
Foster is 52. He moved to Winston-Salem a few years ago after the death of his wife.
His one-story home is modern and well kept up. It's not far off Motor Road, less than a mile from Mineral Springs Elementary School. He lives with his adopted daughter, a young woman with cerebral palsy he's very protective of.
Foster is a large, gregarious man. He keeps track of crimes, car break-ins and burglaries in the area. He knows who his neighbors are, roughly what their situations are and who belongs and who doesn't.
"A single lady with kids lives over there," he said, pointing to the house where he saw the anti-Santa leaving out the back door. "I knew that wasn't right."
Seeing the burglar cut across his own yard was too much. He pulled a 9 mm semi-automatic handgun and attracted the intruder's undivided attention.
"I threw down on him and said 'Don't move,' " Foster said.
The man, identified by police as 23-year-old Jason Carver, complied. Easily the best decision he made in a day marked by one really bad one.
Foster knew that if he went back inside to get his phone, the man lying face down in the yard would get up and run away. So he started yelling for help, and someone called 911.
Carver was charged with one count of felony breaking and entering. He was still in the Forsyth County Jail on Friday afternoon, and it's not his first rodeo. Among other items, he has prior convictions for felony burglary, larceny and robbery with a dangerous weapon.
The rest of the story
The official report filed online by the Winston-Salem Police Department contains only the barest of facts.
A list of items recovered at the scene. The address. Time of day. A check in a box indicating that the case resulted in an arrest.
What it doesn't specify, the narrative of what actually happened, is the fascinating part. Patrol officers assessed the situation and saw Foster pointing a gun at a man.
We got this now, sir. Could you please put that gun away?
Foster said that the minute he did so, the man he'd held for 10 or 15 minutes jumped up and claimed Foster had fired a shot at him. Police quickly determined the story was bogus; no rounds were missing, no one in the area reported hearing gunfire and there was no gunpowder residue on Foster.
Then there was this:
"I told them that if I'd have shot at him, I would have hit him," Foster said. "I was in the Marines. The guy wasn't that far away. And I know that if you point a weapon at a man, you're prepared to use it."
Were there other, better options? Certainly there will be differing opinions on that. But Foster reacted in real time and didn't have time for a lengthy internal debate.
"I'm not going to have someone breaking into my house," he said. "Material things, they can be replaced. But my daughter can't defend herself.
I'm not going to have it. Not on my watch. Not in my neighborhood."
Ooo rah! Once a Marine always a Marine. Thank God and Mister Jefferson for the Marines.
Excellent story. I should hope to be as composed in the same situation.
Semper Fi - in this case faithful to his neighbors.
Here in MA, Foster would be on his way to prison.
It was not one of those articles that only repeats what was on the police report.
As you said: "Criminals lie. Be prepared for it"
Under NC law, he was on very thin ice.
If he had used the gun he would have been arrested and probably gone to jail.
Around here he probably would have been arrested for "brandishing" the gun.
TWB
I live in the country. If I see a person or a vehicle I don’t know on a neighbor’s property I grab my shotgun (already had a pistol in my pocket) and investigate. At a minimum they better know who’s property they are on. Held two at gunpoint once till the sheriff came for them... they failed the quiz. Most of my neighbors do the same and not one has complained in 19 years.
Only among the mentally deranged.
Liberalism is a mental disorder, after all.
In New York the police would’ve shot him. Can’t have a civilian having/owning a gun, that’s just not right. /s
.
That was my observation as well. I would like to see more reporters do their job. This one should be commended.
Yes, I suspect HE will not hear the end of this. Time will tell in the next few months if he gets sued or charged for some stupid reason.
“He keeps track of crimes, car break-ins and burglaries in the area.”
He must stay busy living in the Mineral Springs neigborhood.
For a moment I wondered if the neighbor was Laz; but then it would have been "Alert neighbor hits burglary suspect."
sigh. I need to meet a man like this one!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.