Posted on 09/13/2006 10:03:11 AM PDT by kiriath_jearim
MONROE -- A burglary suspect is dead after the homeowner opened fire. It happened Monday morning in Waxhaw.
Now, the district attorney is working to figure out if the homeowner was protecting his family or if he was protecting his property.
How the DAs office answers that question will determine if the shooting was a legal case of self-defense.
Union County deputies arrived at the home on Locklyn Road around 12:30 a.m. Monday. John David Mobley, 38, had been shot. Paramedics tried to save his life, but were unable.
Its not worth a life, said Mobleys Aunt Mary Wheeler. Its like you see a dog and you dont want him on your land and you shoot him.
She and other family members are questioning why Mobley was killed.
Deputies said Mobley was breaking into some cars that were owned by homeowner Lonny Kirkley. Police said Kirkley grabbed a gun and went outside to investigate.
At some point Mr. Mobley exited the truck, the homeowner fired one time, striking the subject," said Ben Bailey of the Union County Sheriffs Department. The suspect ran, fled the scene and was found about 40 yards away.
Mobley had just been released from prison a few months ago. He had been arrested for drugs, drug paraphernalia and resisting an officer.
Friends of Mobley said he was no stranger to trouble, but he did often help the elderly with raking leaves and cleaning up around their yards.
While his family recognizes Mobleys past, they think the homeowner should be prosecuted. Wheeler wants the homeowner to be charged.
Im 74-years-old and I want justice, Wheeler said.
The Kirkley family was not available for comment, but deputies said they were completely cooperative in their investigation.
The DA is waiting on the medical examiner's report to see if Mobley was shot in the back while running away.
That determination is a key piece of evidence because the law does not consider a suspect who
-Its like you see a dog and you dont want him on your land and you shoot him.-
Whooo ... careful there - there are radicals on this board who insist that harming animals is a death penalty offense where you should be denied bail and sent to a mental institution without trial for "evaluation" as was done in the gulags of the soviet union.
That's called casing the joint.
I helped build my house, my father (a contractor) built it for my Grandma. When she passed my wife and I bought it from her estate. I was in college working for him at the time.
Most guys in construction don't call it spackle.
Neither my Ford nor my Toyota are worth killing over.
I concur sir, however, my Chevy, that's a different matter.
She and other family members are questioning why Mobley was killed.
Are these folks saying theft is OK because they don't have anything worth stealing?
"She and other family members are questioning why Mobley was killed."
Let me help, because he deserved it.
Cool beans. It's always nice to have enough varity in your skill-set (even if its a small ammount of skill) so that you can get things done without having to call in specialists to do something that could be easy/routine. (ie being able to change the oil in your car.)
What's spackle anyway? :0 )
Does it matter? The homeowner stopped the commission of a crime during the event. This should be the end of the discussion right there. I don't care if the criminal was only taking the NRA sticker off the back of the home owners truck.
If you don't want to be SHOT at, don't try and steal other peoples stuff. You may not think their "stuff" is worth your life, but the owner may not feel the same way.
Can be found in Pelosi's makeup bag.
Caseing the joint is more like it. Helping the elderly get rid of their stuff and money...
The dog comment was taken from the article, sorry! I was commenting on it.
Shooting dogs: not good. Shooting criminals on your property: good.
Good for you.
The dog has more value.
"Mobley had just been released from prison a few months ago"
Oh poor thing.
Oh jeez, geez.
Shooting neither dogs nor people is ever intrinsically good, I think...but both are sometimes necessary.
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