Posted on 07/16/2014 5:40:46 AM PDT by csvset
PORTSMOUTH, Va. (WAVY) Imagine youre up watching our late night news when you hear your back door rattling, then see a red laser pointed on your chest. One Portsmouth man claims that happened to him.
Brandon Watson said he was protecting his family when his wife heard noises in the back yard on January 3, 2013: She said, oh my gosh, someone is int he backyard. The noises got closer and then she heard the clicking of the backdoor handle.
In a neighborhood where weapons are everywhere, Brandon Watson didnt hesitate to grab his own legally purchased gun. It was a decision with lingering repercussions.
Photos: Cops went to wrong house, charged homeowner
Brandon remembers, We ran upstairs very quickly she saw guys in all black from right here in this window looking down. Watson said he couldnt immediately find his cell phone to call 911 so he ran downstairs with his firearm and stood at the foot of the stairs, shielded by a wall.
I announced myself, Who is that? Who is that? I have a gun. And as soon as I said that, two red laser beams were on my chest, Watson said. so I looked at the red laser beams on my chest, and I fired a warning shot.
A single shot through a window, and then Watson ran to get help from his neighbor across the street, a Virginia State Police deputy.
As I came out of the house they said, stop, and I said, Who? They then said, Who just fired the shot out the back window? I said I did and I was holding a gun, and they said, put down the gun.
Watson dropped his handgun and said he received shocking news.
They said, we just got news you shot at an officer. I said, An officer? Nobody came to my door. What do you mean an officer? I didnt know there were any officers in my backyard, he told WAVY.com.
Then he learned the dark figures in his backyard were Portsmouth police officers who had not announced themselves.
As far as the officers response, I support their response 100 percent, said Portsmouth Police Chief Ed Hargis, who claims his men never heard Watson say he had a gun or say anything. Anytime the police hear there is a firearm, they start giving verbal commands, and they start yelling police.
It came out in court last September that police were in the wrong backyard. They were supposed to be in Patricia Brooks yard, which is next door to Watson. She had called 911 because she heard unrelated noises in the downstairs of her home.
Portsmouth Commonwealths Attorney Earle Mobley explained how police ended up in the wrong backyard: When they went around from the front, they started counting 2, 3, 4. They were counting the number of townhouse units from the end, where Patricia Brooks lived. Then they see a gate that is open, and that raises suspicion that must be the house, Mobley said.
Mobley admits Watson did not know police were in his backyard, but prosecutes him anyway for misdemeanor reckless handling of a fire arm.
You cannot fire indiscriminately through the window, Mobley said.
And a judge agreed. Watson was found guilty. So he appealed the decision, and a second judge declared a mistrial. At that point, Watson chose to have a jury trial.
This cant be doing your job. You come in my backyard, try to open my door, open my window and flash red laser beams on my chest because you thought I was the burglar, and I thought you were the burglar, Watson said.
The seven-person jury bought that, and found Brandon Watson not guilty, after deliberating only 47 minutes.
The Commonwealth really didnt have a case. It wasnt reckless, so it didnt take a lot of discussion, said Danny Barnes, a juror and WAVY-TV 10 employee.
When 10 On Your Side asked Mobley about the jurors comment, that the Commonwealth failed to prove Watson was reckless, he simply said, I just disagree with that point.
The jury thought Watson showed restraint by only firing one shot.
There was agreement if there had been more than one bullet hole, had he sprayed the wall with bullets, bang, bang, bang, that would have been reckless, Barnes said.
The jury was also concerned police went to the wrong home, and that there was general confusion.
That really wasnt explained very well, and that was a sticking point for most of us, and that wasnt flushed out at all, Barnes said.
The jurors honed in on the red beams on Watsons chest.
The police kept saying they had their weapons pointed at the ground at all times. At the same time, they said they were using their TAC lights on the gun to illuminate whatever they were looking at, Barnes said. You cant be doing both at the same time, thats contradictory.
10 On Your Side asked Chief Hargis if a light could have gone into the window.
Yes, but I dont think it was there for any long period of time, he said.
We asked him if the red lights appearing on Watsons chest were possible.
It is possible, sure, he replied.
Then we asked him to confirm that that was what led to the shooting: The chief responded, Thats when he discharged his firearm.
The Watson case has helped change Portsmouth police policy with the use of red gun laser sights.
This case, and firearm instructor concerns, as well as executive staff, we have modified the policy and taken the lasers off the weapons, Chief Hargis said.
Most stunning the jury found police were unfair in how they pursued Watson.
They absolutely did he was put in a no win situation, Barnes said.
For Brandon Watson, the incident turned his life upside down. He was unemployed for 10 months, and thinks under the circumstances, he deserves restitution.
I begged them not to charge me I knew what it meant I got no jobs no one would hire me after they ran the criminal background check, because I was charged with reckless handling of a firearm, Watson said.
Watson continues moving forward with a possible lawsuit against the city of Portsmouth. The case would allege negligence or gross negligence.
All civil rights violations are serious business. However, this violation of the 4th amendment involves armed goons in the dead of night, which could have very easily gotten an innocent man killed. After this innocent man was killed, all the cops would go home safe to their families and suffer little to no consequences for murdering him in his own home.
if they were cops... on legal business... they should’ve knocked on the front door and announced themselves.
if that was my situation, having the family secured upstairs as best i can and holding the bottom of the stairs, i would be fully defensive and any actions would be swift and decisive.
i would not give a warning. the warning was the locked door.
when facing multiple assailants, surprise is your friend. make the first and second shots count and the odds can quickly shift in your favor.
adding confusion to the situation with distractions can give you the advantage.
you know the terrain, they don’t. use it
Are you questioning the police, *citizen*?
Looks like someone needs a SWAT team visit.
/FR bootlicks
Civil society is broken. At any stage of this tragicomedy a judge could have had a conference with the prosecution and calmly explained... “They were at the WRONG house!”
I was being sarcastic.
“...Now I have aggregation aggravation....”
In obamas world you get disability from SSDI
Continually seeking absolute power.
I believed I have already addressed my typo. Read above.
If it was like the trial on which I was on the jury, they were cooling their heels for a half an hour while the clerk finished the paperwork and the prosecutor pushed one last plea deal before we could even start deliberating.
Putting laser sights on a person is not securing the area.
Whether I am the homeowner or perp you are just asking to get shot if you have not announced. I know where you are you may not know where I am.
Yeah, that’s me. Day late and a dollar short. =;^)
Let’s make a deal, I won’t count your human frailties but please don’t keep track of mine :)
Stupid lack of a sarcasm indicator. Someone ought to do something about that. (more sarcasm)
Done! “Sold, American!”
But then, there is this one:
That really wasnt explained very well, and that was a sticking point for most of us, and that wasnt flushed out at all, Barnes said.
Of course, I'm sure he means "fleshed", but then, it was a direct quote, so who knows?
I suspect it is just more dumbassed journalism.
I’m beginning to think that Journalism majors are folks who can’t compete in the school of Education.
Mathematics lecture for Journalism majors:
“This is a numeral seven. He do you feel about it?”
And that charge of “reckless handling of a firearm” will never go away, no matter how many times he gets it “expunged” from the record and the records of the expungements will not be available for the employers doing background checks, only the charge. That is police revenge. If they can’t get you later for numerous phoney traffic tickets, there is always that eternal blemish on your record.
No-knock raids and the subsequent killings of people and pets serve as recreation for LEOs. It is computer gaming for wannabe SEALs who lack the mental requirements of SEALs.
I sharpen a knife blade until it is ready to be honed. I then hone in on it until I have created an Euclidian plane.
A homing pigeon cares not what a Euclidian plane is. Nor do most people. Does a homing pigeon “hone in” on home, or does the homing pigeon “home in” on home?
dd, If you think the red thingies are neat, you should see the green thingies. I use both at Christmas time to create a light display amid the snow flakes. Nor do homing pigeons care about that.
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.