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Man says he shot neighbor in self-defense
The Register Guard (Eugene, OR) ^ | 01.14.05 | Rebecca Nolan

Posted on 01/15/2005 6:50:11 AM PST by Mad Dawg

Man says he shot neighbor in self-defense

By Rebecca Nolan
The Register-Guard
  

James Michael Winkelman says he fatally shot a neighbor in self-defense when the other man threatened him with a gun.

He says 43-year-old Todd Alan Hughes pulled a handgun on him Tuesday as Winkelman tried to detain the man for police. Winkelman's daughter believed that Hughes had raped a woman in the street, and Winkelman was trying to make sure he didn't disappear before officers arrived.

Now Winkelman, 48, is struggling to deal with the fact that he took another person's life. It hasn't been easy.

"I don't feel happy and proud," Winkelman said Thursday. "I feel like I killed a human being. I caused a lot of pain for his family, and I caused a lot of pain for my family. We're devastated."

Winkelman decided to tell his story so people would understand that "I'm not some kind of gun-happy nut that my daughter tells me someone's being raped and I just go down there and shoot someone."

It was more complicated than that, he said.

Winkelman looks tough, but his body has been destroyed by a series of violent car wrecks that fractured nearly every bone. He also suffers from Meniere's syndrome, a disease of the inner ear that affects balance and hearing.

Because of these vulnerabilities, he obtained a concealed handgun permit and carries a gun whenever he leaves the house. He was carrying a 9mm Smith & Wesson handgun on Tuesday night when he went out to walk one of the two family dogs.

His 13-year-old daughter ran up to him out of breath and hysterical. She said a man with long red hair was raping a woman on the sidewalk at the corner of West 13th Avenue and Garfield Street. She said the woman was screaming for help and for someone to call the police. She said she saw the man run into the house at 2020 W. 13th Ave.

Winkelman doesn't have a cell phone, so he and his daughter ran to a house on Arthur Street and flagged down a neighbor. The girl went to call police, and the neighbor drove Winkelman to the house so he could wait for officers to arrive.

Winkelman said he saw someone peeking out through the window. "I said, `Dude, the police are coming. Stay in the house,' " Winkelman said. Soon, though, Winkelman saw a man stepping out of the backyard onto West 13th.

"I ran over to him and confronted him," Winkelman said. "I told him, `My daughter said you were raping a person. Sit down on the porch and wait for police.' "

The man said he hadn't done anything. He said the woman was his wife; they were drunk; they'd had a fight. The man continued to walk west, away from the house. Winkelman told him over and over to sit down and wait for police.

"He had his back to me," Winkelman said. "He stuck his hands in his pockets and was fumbling around. I said, `Get your ... hands out of your pockets.' "

That's when Winkelman drew his gun from its holster. He had the safety on and his finger was on the frame, not the trigger, he said. He said he ordered the man four times to put his hands where he could see them.

Instead, the man turned around and started to walk back toward the house. "He was looking right at me," Winkelman said. "I showed him I was taking the safety off and putting my finger on the trigger."

He said he ordered the man to stop and show his hands 20 to 25 times. The man did stop, right in front of the house. He and Winkelman were about three feet apart.

Winkelman said the man whipped around and pulled a semiautomatic handgun from his pocket. He remembers it had pearl inlay on the grip.

"It was so close I tried to hit it out of the way with my left hand," Winkelman said. "At the same time, I dropped my gun down toward my waist and started firing.

"I popped off five rounds," he said. "I kept shooting until he dropped the pistol. He fell to the ground and rolled over."

Winkelman thought he heard the man say something. He leaned closer and realized he was hearing gurgling noises caused by a sucking chest wound. His six years experience in the Army told him that CPR would increase the damage. So he started screaming for an ambulance. He ran to Garfield Street and shouted for passing cars to call 911. Finally, a neighbor walked out with a cell phone, and Winkelman spoke to dispatchers.

An officer arrived and shined a bright light on Winkelman, who slowly set the weapon down in the street. He said he complied with the officer's orders. He noticed that he was shaking violently and hyperventilating. Detectives took him to City Hall, where they interviewed him until about midnight. Winkelman said they believed his story and returned his concealed weapons permit, though they kept the gun for evidence.

"They said, `Look, you're going home tonight,' " Winkelman said. "They said if they had any doubts about what I was telling them, I would not be going home tonight."

Police have said Winkelman is cooperating with the investigation. Police spokeswoman Pam Olshanski said she could not confirm Winkelman's story until the investigation is complete. She said the Lane County district attorney's office will decide whether to file any charges.

Winkelman couldn't explain why Hughes' girlfriend later said Hughes wasn't raping her. She told police he was beating her that night.

He said he empathized with Hughes' family and friends, who have been congregating at the house since the night he died. He said he'd only encountered the man twice before while walking his dog down the street - and those two interactions persuaded him to avoid the area.

Winkelman said he was trying to be a good citizen. "I'm not a police officer, but I'm certainly not going to let someone accused of a crime like that go wandering off," he said. "He may have been a really great person, but he was out there beating the living hell out of that woman on the street."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: bang; banglist; ccw; justice; rkba
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To: bad company
I'm stealing that for my tagline.

Go ahead, make my ...., uh, wait, somebody already said that.

61 posted on 01/17/2005 5:54:46 AM PST by Mad Dawg (My P226 wants to teach you what SIGnify means ...)
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To: El Gato; jdub
"I doubt it would take me more than two seconds to pull a pistol if that was my intention."

Lots of scumbags don't carry in nice holsters, pager pals, "Thunderwear" or the like. They carry in their pockets, and the gun may well hang up if one attempts to draw it under pressure.

Not to mention that the "scumbag" may have been drunk, high, brain-damaged from overuse of substances used to cause one or both of the two previously mentioned conditions, or all three. Anybody ever watch "Cops?" These guys aren't hitting on all eight cylinders.

62 posted on 01/17/2005 7:43:52 PM PST by rmh47 (Go Kats! - Got Seven?)
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To: Mad Dawg
Yeah. Good point. EXCEPT, I'm wondering what happens if you draw, as the "good guy" did, and it turns out the bad guy was reaching for dental floss (or his cell phone, to call 911)?

Well, would you rather face a charge of brandishing, or have your spouse get "the call"? I'll tell my story in court, thank you very much.

63 posted on 01/17/2005 8:05:24 PM PST by El Gato (Activist Judges can twist the Constitution into anything they want ... or so they think.)
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To: El Gato
The thread that would not die ....

Well, would you rather face a charge of brandishing, or have your spouse get "the call"? I'll tell my story in court, thank you very much.

I don't think I'm disputing THAT. Living to pay lawyers is better than having my heirs pay gravediggers.

I think my deep background assumption is that GENERALLY a situation where I have to draw my weapon is one I want to prevent, if I can. The only time I've ever drawn (so far) was on a guy who approached me with a club when I was re-routing traffic around a disabled vehicle. And even then I think there are ways I could have avoided the whole incident, while still responding to the DAV.

Then, phase two, if I have to present or, God forbid, use my firearm, I want to structure things so that I don't have to hire a lawyer afterwards.

In this case (assuming we have good data, which I doubt), our hero went into a situation with insufficient backup. He let the bogie get WAY too close to him -- close enough for G.G. to knock bogie's weapon aside with his hand. It's not clear a crime was still in progress when our hero showed up on the scene, and his seemingly poorly prepared attempt at detention ended up with blood on the streets.

I think he'll be fortunate to avoid the lawyers, but yes, I do think "better judged by twelve than carried by six" is a good starting point. But it's only a starting point.

I look at it like this: Better to pay exorbitant sums of money on my kid's teeth than have her teeth stay crooked and lawyers get richer. In terms of this story, now that we've read it, what would we do if a 13 year old suddenly, hysterically told us a rape was going on, and when we got there there was no coommotion. What we do considering that the right decision would mean bad guy in custody and the wrong decision would mean no prom dress, no orthodontist, no college tuition, and possibly no daddy for a period of years for the 13 year old.

64 posted on 01/18/2005 4:36:34 AM PST by Mad Dawg (My P226 wants to teach you what SIGnify means ...)
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