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Texan a vigilante or brave law abider? ( Called 911 and ask for cops before burglars escaped....)
Los Angeles Times ^ | November 25, 2007 | Miguel Bustillo, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

Posted on 11/27/2007 6:15:36 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach

A 911 recording of a man who shot and killed two burglary suspects has stirred debate on whether he should be condemned or praised.

PASADENA, TEXAS -- When he saw two men pry into his neighbor's house with a crowbar one afternoon earlier this month, Joe Horn did what many people would do: He called 911.

But when police had not shown up by the time the suspects were about to leave, the 61-year-old retiree did something most people probably would not: He stepped outside with his 12-gauge shotgun and killed them.

"I'm not going to let them get away with this," Horn told the 911 dispatcher, who responded: "Property's not worth killing someone over."

Seconds later, the sound of a gun being loaded could be heard on the 911 tape, followed by a warning -- "Move [and] you're dead" -- and then three bursts of gunfire. Miguel DeJesus, 38, and Diego Ortiz, 30, both of whom had small-time criminal histories, died of their wounds.

The six-minute recording of Horn's anger, frustration and eagerness to take the law into his own hands has made him the focus of a national controversy. Critics condemn him as a vigilante bent on meting out murderous justice. Admirers praise him as a courageous hero whom any law abider would love to have next door.

"Why is he still a free man?" Linda E. Edwards wrote in a letter to the Houston Chronicle.

"Joe Horn gets a Texas 'attaboy' from me," countered John E. Meagher in the next letter. "Justice was served, law or not."

As the debate rages on talk radio and cable-TV news shows, Horn remains free.

(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events; US: Texas; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: emergency911; justice
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To: Jeff Head

To: Miguel Bustillo, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
RE: Texan a vigilante or brave law abider

Dear Mr. Bustillo,
You had a fair and balanced story going, until your last paragraph, and then you turned it into a propaganda story worthy of distain.

To state “Noting that Horn is white and the suspects were dark-skinned, Quanell X, a Houston activist, has accused the authorities of bias. “Mr. Horn did not have to kill those people,” Quanell X said at a protest on the street where the men were shot. “Mr. Horn became judge, jury and executioner.”

With that paragraph you changed a law and order story into a racist one. This means that you are nothing more than a race monger and propagandist, for the last paragraph is crap because it does nothing to enhance your original supposition but brings race into it. Since YOU brought up race how about being honest and point out that the DEAD criminals were illegal aliens. Then you could talked about how 90% of the crime in the USA is committed by either Blacks or Hispanics. You could have also mentioned that crime waves increase with the number of ILLEGAL ALIENS.

No by adding that garbage in the last paragraph you lost all respect as an honest writer and became nothing but a LIBERAL American hater. People like you, no matter what your skin color, are a disgrace to American and the free press.
Exton


81 posted on 11/27/2007 9:35:06 PM PST by Exton1
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To: o_zarkman44
It wasn’t his fault the criminals didn’t surrender and ran.

Right toward him. Neighbor confirms his version. Not the brightest bulbs to charge a guy with a 12 gauge pump in hand. Especially one that already has a round chambered. No Click-Clack before the BOOM.

But he did give them a choice to stop and just wait for the police.

They chose wrongly.


82 posted on 11/27/2007 10:00:57 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Texas law allows people to use deadly force to protect their own property to stop arson, burglary, robbery, theft or criminal mischief at night.

And the property of others as well.

83 posted on 11/27/2007 10:02:37 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: RightFighter
“You move you’re dead” and the gunshots came immediately after that. There was no delay at all. I’m not saying he wasn’t justified legally in what he did, I just think that he went a little overboard in his eagerness to shoot these guys.

As confirmed by a neighbor, the reason he shot right away is that they moved towards him right away. You want him to delay and increase the chances that he'd only get one before the other got him?

84 posted on 11/27/2007 10:05:04 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: elkfersupper
They were killed for invading the sanctity of the neighbor's home.

That was what got them in trouble, but they were killed for being stupid enough to advance on a guy with a 12 gauge pump who has just told them not to move.

85 posted on 11/27/2007 10:07:39 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: El Gato

Excellent points...especially since at 61 his reflexes are as quick as the young ones....


86 posted on 11/27/2007 10:09:20 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (No Burkas for my Grandaughters!)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

That should be ARE NOT as quick...


87 posted on 11/27/2007 10:09:50 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (No Burkas for my Grandaughters!)
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To: El Gato
As confirmed by a neighbor, the reason he shot right away is that they moved towards him right away. You want him to delay and increase the chances that he'd only get one before the other got him?

It doesn't take long to cover 15 feet and a shotgun is not the best weapon to get off two shots in a hurry.

88 posted on 11/27/2007 10:13:06 PM PST by Seven_0 (You cannot fool all of the people, ever!)
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To: new cruelty
And the police arrived shortly after the theives were shot. ...

How long is "shortly?" Long enough for them to kill Mr. Horn? But in any event, considering they hadn't arrived in those 7 minutes, and that Mr. Horn could not know that the police were going to come along "shortly".

BTW, while they were thieves, what's important under the law is that they were also burglars.

89 posted on 11/27/2007 10:15:00 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: M. Dodge Thomas
It’s just that some of the same people see it as perfectly rational to shoot someone if they are trying to steal a burger off your backyard grill, because that’s not a fetish, that’s about the sacred nature of Property,

Stealing a hamburger off the grill would be simple theft, and because this was during the daytime, Texas law would not justify use of deadly force. But this was a break in, witnessed by Mr. Horn. That makes it a burglary, which is justification for use of deadly force under Texas law.

Even so, he shot to defend himself, not the property. At least one other witness confirms that the departed were on his property and advanced towards him, when he shot them.

90 posted on 11/27/2007 10:21:28 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: Timothy
Everyone is missing one of the most important points here - what if the man was mistaken? It said that he didn’t know his neighbors very well - what if there was a reason for those guys breaking into the house that he didn’t know about? I have broken into houses plenty of times because of special cases - even used a crowbar once - and they were all special cases but perfectly justified nonetheless.

Would you have advanced on him when he yelled "move or you're dead"? Would you have gone onto your neighbors' property after breaking in to that house, and coming out with a bag of something you didn't have when going in. Would you have broken out a different window, as well as in? (Can't figure out why they did that, instead of just opening a door or a window, but they did.)

91 posted on 11/27/2007 10:25:48 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: berdie
Frankly, I hate the idea of vigilante force

But stopping a crime in progress is not vigilantism, not in Texas at any rate. It's also not vigilantism to shoot at someone who is advancing on you after being told to stop. Especially when that someone has just committed a felony, which you know, and is now on your property.

92 posted on 11/27/2007 10:29:03 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: Seven_0
It doesn't take long to cover 15 feet and a shotgun is not the best weapon to get off two shots in a hurry.

Since one of the burglars was shot in the side, I would suppose that he started to turn at the time of the first shot, or possibly the second. One shot missed, maybe the second. There was a bit more time between the 2nd and 3rd than between the first and second.

93 posted on 11/27/2007 10:33:01 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: Godwin1
this elderly man

61 is old, but not elderly. (I'm 58 BTW. :) ..

94 posted on 11/27/2007 10:34:53 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: El Gato
Since one of the burglars was shot in the side, I would suppose that he started to turn at the time of the first shot, or possibly the second. One shot missed, maybe the second. There was a bit more time between the 2nd and 3rd than between the first and second.

I didn't know that one shot missed. It wiil be interesting when the details come out. It seems to me that there was enough time between the second and third shot for one of the burgulars to cover the distance between them.

95 posted on 11/27/2007 10:47:01 PM PST by Seven_0 (You cannot fool all of the people, ever!)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
As of now, he hasn’t been indicted, but it appears to be going to a Grand Jury. I don’t think the cops wanted to be in the middle of this. If the prosecutor is elected in Pasadena, then there will most likely be a no bill.
96 posted on 11/27/2007 10:52:34 PM PST by chuckles
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To: El Gato
Long enough for them to kill Mr. Horn?... Mr. Horn could not know that the police were going to come along "shortly".

Maybe long enough for them to kill everyone in pasadena, galena park, la porte, clear lake, seabrook, and deer park. Good thing Mr. Horn shot them when he did.

97 posted on 11/27/2007 10:58:43 PM PST by new cruelty
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To: JustaDumbBlonde

“As the details are investigated on that one, I think it will be more of a case of a thug-related killing, not a burglary.”

Right, I don’t think your average burglar would kick down a bedroom door and open fire.


98 posted on 11/28/2007 3:25:23 AM PST by Mila
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To: new cruelty
You snide comment aside...it is a good thing he shot them when he did. They were coming at him. They had already committed a crime and he knew that they had a tire iron at the least, and there were two of them. He gave them a chance to stop, but they ignored it (or maybe even did not understand it...though I doubt that, when a man is holding a shotgun gives you a command after you have been stealing, the image is probably universally understood) and then came directly at him. He fired in his own defense at that point.
99 posted on 11/28/2007 4:49:01 AM PST by Jeff Head (Freedom is not free...never has been, never will be. (www.dragonsfuryseries.com))
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To: El Gato; roamer_1; Shadowstrike

The fact is that this man didn’t have any intention of warning anyone - he wanted to kill them. The “warning” was just for show so that he could say he warned them. The shooting happened so quickly after the “warning” that there’s no way anyone can argue that he gave them any kind of true warning. If you listen to the audio, at around the 5:30 mark, he tells the officer “I’m gonna kill ‘em”. He doesn’t say he’s going to stop them or detain them, he says he’s going to kill them. Clearly his intent when he walked out with the shotgun was to kill.

As I stated earlier, he may have been justified legally in what he did, I’m really not sure on that point how the Texas law applies to him in this case. I just think that he is being dishonest about what his motives were. He was not trying to stop a robbery. He left that house with the intent to kill someone.


100 posted on 11/28/2007 5:30:09 AM PST by RightFighter
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