Wednesday, April 01, 2009



FL: pharmacist kills armed robber: "A pharmacist shot an armed robber dead Tuesday at a drugstore off South Orange Blossom Trail, the Orange County Sheriff's Office said. The shooting happened about 5:15 p.m. at JR Pharmacy, 2160 Whispering Lakes Blvd. The man came into the shop with a handgun and, after a brief confrontation, was shot to death, sheriff's spokesman Jim Solomons said. Investigators would not release names, where the body was found or what the man tried to steal. The drugstore caters to the heavily Hispanic clientele in the neighborhood, customer Evette Luciano said. Evette Luciano said she spoke to one of the partner's wives and was told that the shooting happened in the front of the store while two owners were in the back. The worker who did the shooting formerly worked across the street at Walgreens, customers said. There was another armed robbery at JR Pharmacy in April 2007, Solomons said. There are no laws preventing people from defending themselves with guns at home or at work. "The Legislature has empowered people to protect themselves," said sheriff's Cmdr. Paul "Spike" Hopkins. "People are tired of being victims."


Michigan store owner chases robber with gun: "When Amos Bell spotted the owner of the Leonard Short Stop chasing a masked gunman Tuesday morning, he didn't hesitate to help. He got out of the car he was riding in, and gave chase. "(The owner) was running up the street with a gun," said Bell, 18. "I knew it wasn't going to be nothing good." Bell and the owner, who had been shot in the leg in the 10:40 a.m. holdup, lost sight of the robber, but police caught the suspect a half-hour later hiding in some bushes. Police brought Bell and the hobbled owner, whose name wasn't released, to the scene of the capture to identify the robber. Police caught up to the suspect just after 11 a.m., and found a handgun, too. Officers were responding to a call that a store owner, armed with a long gun, was chasing a man who had just shot him. The owner told Bell that he was shot in the leg when he refused the robber's demand for cash. Police recovered the $800 reported stolen. The owner returned to his store after Tuesday's shooting, walking with a limp and the sides of his denims slit for examination by paramedics. Awaiting ambulances soon left after the man said he didn't need to go to the hospital, Bell said."


TX: Shotgun blast deters robbers: "Authorities arrested Jose Manuel Salas, 33, and Javier Harvey Ortiz, 44, Saturday in connection with an early morning robbery along Azle Highway. Reports indicate a homeowner operating a business from the same location called for help at approximately 1:30 a.m. after he found two men stealing cash and rolls of quarters from his business. The homeowner told the men to stop before firing a shotgun once at one of the suspects who then fled with another man in a car, according to an affidavit detailing the incident. A short time later, Parker County Sheriff’s deputies detained a vehicle matching the homeowner’s description. Salas was driving and Ortiz was a passenger, the Sheriff’s Office said. A statement claims deputies found stolen property matching a description given by the homeowner inside the vehicle, and the homeowner arrived to identify the suspects and vehicle. Salas was charged with burglary of a habitation, failure to maintain financial responsibility and for no driver’s license. Ortiz was arrested in accordance with a Tarrant County warrant and was also charged with burglary of habitation."


“One gun a month” — rationing Constitutional rights: “I have recently been discussing, one at a time, the various approaches the forcible citizen disarmament lobby takes in pursuing its agenda. Today, we’ll look at ‘one gun a month’ laws. The idea behind such legislation is that if limited to buying only one gun per month, an aspiring gun trafficker will be unable to efficiently ply his illicit trade …. Of the three states that do have a ‘one handgun a month’ law on the books, one is Virginia — commonly singled out as being at fault for violent crime in New York, because of its ‘weak gun laws.’ My guess is that if the ‘Mayors Against Illegal Guns’ had their way, Virginia (and every other state) would have a ‘no guns per month’ law.”

No comments: