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Monday, August 24, 2009
Doggone Bad Time In North Keller
When I read about this incident yesterday I was wondering what the heck is going on up there in North Keller. This morning’s story update helped answer that when the fact that both parties had been drinking was added.
Anyhow, this is why I bring Malcolm in if it looks like he’s going to bark for an extended period of time:
KELLER—A 38-year-old man begged his neighbor not to shoot him a second time early Sunday after the two argued over a barking dog, police said Monday.
The shooter didn’t, but he said, “Get off my ... property,” to another person who tried to help the wounded victim, police said.
Police identified the suspect as Edward M. Stewart of Keller who was free Monday after posting bail Sunday night.
Stewart, 49, was arraigned late Sunday on a charge of attempted murder, two counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and one charge of deadly conduct.
The 38-year-old neighbor remained in a Fort Worth hospital Monday suffering from a gunshot wound to the stomach.
Along with his neighbor, Stewart accidently wounded his own wife during the incident, police said.
The shooting happened at about 12:34 a.m. Sunday in the 1300 block of Robin Court after Stewart and the victim had been arguing through a fence about the dog.
According to police reports, the victim was having a fantasy football party and the dog had been barking.
“The two were at the fence when the suspect told the victim that he would fight him if he climbed over into his backyard,” Keller police Lt. Brenda Slovak said Monday. “The victim climbed over the fence into the backyard.”
Stewart and the victim were both intoxicated, according to police reports.
The two pushed each other for a few minutes, police said Monday. At one point, Stewart’s wife tried to stop it, police said.
Within minutes, Stewart is accused of pulling out a revolver and shooting his neighbor in the abdomen, police said. The bullet went through the man and lodged in the leg of the Stewart’s wife, who was trying to stop the argument, police said.
“One of the friends of the victim was at the back fence, saw what happened and jumped over to help his friend,” Slovak said. “But he jumped back over when the suspect threatened him.”
Stewart’s wife was treated and released from a local hospital a few hours after the shooting.
Police had no record of responding to calls between the neighbors before Sunday.
Most of my neighbors also have dogs, and those dogs bark a lot, but fortunately they don’t do it too much at night. Malcolm is also a prodigious barker, and if left to his own devices will bark for hours. So I make sure to bring him in if he’s having a barking fit. Heck, it annoys me, and he’s my dog.
It’s going to be interesting to watch this case to see how it unfolds. There may be a chance the shooter can claim self-defense. But given that both of these kuckleheads were drinking and fighting, it makes things more murky (i.e. depending on what was said by the shooter, the shootee might be able to claim mutual combat). I suppose it will depend on who tells the best story to the grand jury.
But regardless of the court outcome, I suspect that one or the other of them will probably have to end up moving. Shooting your neighbor / being shot by your neighbor, doesn’t exactly make for warm-and-fuzzy future relations.
Guns • It's A Dog's Life • Keller Stuff • (0) Comments | Pop-up Comments • Permalink
Tuesday, May 05, 2009
A Brief Meditation on Deadly Force (and the Internet)
I have become increasingly annoyed by what I am seeing as a more and more common reaction to a righteous shooting these days. I suppose it’s to be expected given the fact that the Internet is now bringing together two populations that previously would not have had much chance to mix it up with one another. But you can set your watch by the time line of these things:
* Shooting occurs
* Newspaper publishes online article and/or blogger posts about it
* Comments come in from pro self-defense citizens (“One more criminal off the streets,” etc)
* Outraged friends and family of the dead perpetrator find the article through Google or other search engine
* Friends and family post:
- He was such a good kid, he couldn’t have done this
- No one has the right to kill someone else
- People are hearing the whole story, he was set up
- What was the victim doing with a gun? Was he some kind of criminal?
* Pro self-defense people respond
* Lather, rinse, repeat…
The latest incident can be seen in the comments at Beyond Right Field concerning this incident.
An 18-year-old Fort Worth man killed Tuesday afternoon inside a north Fort Worth apartment had apparently forced his way inside, armed with an aluminum bat, when he was shot by one of the apartment’s residents, investigators said.
Derek Splawn, a student in the Keller school district, had been upset with the apartment’s 18-year-old resident and had reportedly threatened in an earlier telephone conversation “that he was tired of this and he was going to come over there,” homicide Detective Curt Brannan said.
Around 4 p.m. Tuesday, police said, Splawn made good on his word and had a friend drive him to the Watercolor apartments in the 8600 block of Spring Tree Lane, near Beach Street and North Tarrant Parkway. As the friend waited in the car, Brannan said, Splawn first pounded on the apartment’s patio door, shouting for the 18-year-old resident to come out, before beating on the apartment’s front door.
Though the resident did not emerge, Brannan said, Splawn was able to force his way inside the apartment after the resident’s roommate opened the front door to peek out and saw Splawn standing there with the bat.
“Before he could get the door shut, the man [Splawn] pushed the door open and had taken several steps inside the doorway in the direction of the [18-year-old],” Brannan said.
Brannan said the 18-year-old, in turn, picked up a shotgun he kept in the home and fired once, striking Splawn in the face.
Provided the facts are as stated, this seems pretty open-and-shut. A hothead attempts to attack a rival with a deadly weapon and is killed in the act. I will grant that the media often gets a lot wrong, but most of the article seems to be direct quotes from the Detective working the case. So, unless and until someone can present credible evidence that something in the above is materially incorrect, I will go with the assumption that the facts as given are correct.
I almost got sucked into this vortex, but this comment made me realize that there’s probably no hope of meaningful communication between the two sides:
If you came up to me with a bat,And i had a shot gun
who do you think would win?
I dont care what you say you cannot justify shooting someone in the face with a shotgun because he had a bat.
Mabey you could call it self-defence if he shot him in the leg.
But no,Hes just needed an excuse to kill derek.
I knew derek very personally and i knew sam as well,And i can tell you that sam didnt give a crap whether derek had that bat or not
He still would have shot him
but now no justice is coming and thats the hardest part about it.
My first thought is that I wouldn’t be stupid enough to take on someone who had a gun if I had a baseball bat and I am certainly not going to be bursting into anyone’s apartment anytime soon. Finally, shooting people in the leg is what people do in stupid movies. In real life you shoot to stop the threat.
It finally dawned on me, though (after I responded that I most certainly could justify the shooting) that this commenter really doesn’t grok the idea that a baseball bat can be a deadly weapon and that you have the right to use deadly force to defend yourself against someone with a bat. It’s almost like he’s looking for some kind of “fair fight,” which would be stupid beyond belief. Am I supposed to just stand there and let someone hit me with a bat because a gun is supposedly unfair or something? Deadly force is deadly force, and a baseball bat can certainly constitute deadly force in some circumstances.
But it’s sometimes difficult for me to remember that your average person hasn’t contemplated these sorts of things, and that goes especially so for your average teenager. However, it’s exactly the sort of thing that you must confront if you choose to carry a gun or to keep one at home for defense. You must have a passing familiarity with the law on deadly force as well as an understanding of what “deadly force” means.
I’m not a lawyer, so don’t take this as legal advice, but a quick reading of the above two links to the Penal Code indicates to me that I don’t have to let the attacker get a hit in, nor do I have to worry too much about the instrumentality he or she is using provided that I reasonably believe that it’s capable of inflicting death or great bodily injury on me and that the person is intending to do so right now. It occurs to me that while it was designed around knives, the lessons learned from the Tueller Drill would seem appropriate to someone armed with a bat as well. Perhaps even more so, because I would fear that one hit from an aluminum bat could leave me unconscious and at the mercy of the attacker, while I might be able to still respond after the first knife thrust.
I suppose this all might seem a bit blood-thirsty or dark to someone who hasn’t considered the topic much before. But the average gun owner is not sitting around cackling with glee at the thought of killing someone. It should be noted that we do not shoot to kill, but to stop a threat. If the perpetrator dies as a result, the fault lies with the perpetrator for initiating deadly force against us.
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Thursday, March 05, 2009
The Smell of PSH In The Morning
The following letter to the editor appeared in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram on Tuesday. I’ve been wanting to tear into it, but I haven’t had time until today.
College students have shown such amazing maturity with respect to alcohol, frat rituals and spring break (just visit Cancun in March and see for yourselves), that it seems only obvious we should throw concealed handguns into the mix.
What are Sen. Jeff Wentworth, R-San Antonio, and Reps. Joe Driver, R-Garland, and Debbie Riddle, R-Tomball, thinking? (See: “Gun bills are in lawmakers’ sights,” March 1)
If these bills become law, they will bring the law of unintended consequences: only Texans will be foolish enough and culturally inclined to apply to colleges that allow concealed handguns on campuses. And Texas will reinforce its image as “a whole ’nother country” and “the home of broad lawns and narrow minds.”
Most of our Texas colleges and universities are too good and too safe to suffer this foolishness!
— Rufus Schriber, Fort Worth
While Mr. Schriber’s PSH-laden missive would have us conjure up the old Animal House image of college students as a bunch of drunken frat boys, it helps to remember that people who are licensed to carry concealed are adults over the age of 21 who have clean criminal backgrounds and are perhaps the most law-abiding segment of society that you will find. The idea that someone with a CHL will get drunk and shoot up the campus is ridiculous on its face. Responsible adults with a CHL simply aren’t going to be doing this.
This line, though, is highly ironic:
...only Texans will be foolish enough and culturally inclined to apply to colleges that allow concealed handguns on campuses. And Texas will reinforce its image as “a whole ’nother country” and “the home of broad lawns and narrow minds.”
The writer accuses us of having narrow minds, while being quite guilty of the same alleged fault. I mention this because there are indeed other states where concealed carry is either explicitly allowed or possible if the school allows it:
15 “Right-to-Carry” states leave the decision of concealed carry on college campuses entirely to each college/university. A person with a license/permit who was caught carrying a firearm on a college campus could not be held criminally liable but students and employees of a university would be expelled or have their employment terminated. These states are Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia.
Though these states contain a few colleges/universities, such as Colorado State University (Fort Collins, CO) and Blue Ridge Community College (Weyers Cave, VA), that allow concealed carry on campus, most prohibit it. Utah is the only state to allow concealed carry at all public colleges/universities, by prohibiting public colleges/universities from creating their own restrictions.
Of course, this seems par for the course with this kind of blood-will-run-in-the-streets hysteria. Everywhere that expansion of the right to carry is proposed someone can be relied upon to come out of the woodwork (much like the cuckoo in a cuckoo-clock) to claim that their state will become the OK Corral, completely ignoring the experience of the other states that have already done so.
Aside from this letter I also heard a comment from a member of some anti-gun group claiming that our Texas universities are already very safe and that most crime occurs off-campus. This may be true, but it ignores the fact that a lot of crime occurs when law-abiding adult students are going to-and-from campus and are legally required to be disarmed because of the law against carrying on school premises. While the new law itself won’t stop all crime, it is a good start towards making our campuses safer against both mass-murderers and on-and-near-campus rapists.
It’s always good to remember that wherever the law bans guns, it just means that only the victims will be disarmed. Bad guys don’t give a damn about any silly laws.
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Wednesday, March 04, 2009
Stay Home And Send The Money Where It Will Help
I was looking forward to going to Phoenix this year for the NRA Annual Meeting and the Second Amendment Blog Bash. However, I’ve decided that I’m not going to go.
First, there’s the amount of time away from work. I don’t want to fly and driving adds two extra days each way (it’s just over 1000 miles from here to Phoenix, and I just don’t have the stamina to drive that far in one sitting anymore). Since my sister is moving back to Colorado from Alaska in June, I was planning on visiting her in July. I can take the vacation time I would have used in May and use it for the Colorado trip. Second, there’s the cost. My rough estimate is that the total cost of this trip would be around $1000 by the time I was done with everything (gas, hotels, food, etc). Somehow I’m having trouble coming to terms with spending that much money on a trip in the current economy.
So, I’ve decided to stay, but to help the 2A cause, I will donate part of the money I would have spent on the trip to NRA-ILA and NRA-PVF. The rest will be spent on additional ammo to maintain stocks in my ammo closet. I will receive my yearly bonus later this month. When it comes, I will send $250 each to NRA-ILA and NRA-PVF and set aside another $500 for ammo.
To me this is a more useful way to spend $1000 so that it promotes the Second Amendment rather than spending it on gas and hotels. I’ll still miss going, but I can always go another year when the meeting is closer to home.
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Tuesday, December 16, 2008
DFW Gun Show list updates
I just sent out an email via my gun show announcement list** that there have been updates to the DFW Gun Show list that I maintain.
I added new show dates for High Caliber Shows in the first half of 2009. I also added an entirely new show called the Big “D” Gun Show @ Mesquite Rodeo. It is being run by the promoters of the Original Fort Worth Gun Show, and it will be held on January 24-25, 2009 at the Mesquite Rodeo Exhibition Center.
On the technical side of things, I upgraded the site to the latest version of Expression Engine (which affects this site as well), and added an RSS Atom feed. This will allow people to use their RSS readers or the “Live Bookmarks” feature of Firefox to keep track of changes to the site.
** I added the list one day almost on a whim as a way to let readers “subscribe” to the site. I promised that it would be a low-volume announcement list just for updates to the list. So despite every few days seeing notifications for a new subscription or two, I was a bit surprised to see today that I’m up to 574 subscribers. Not bad for something I spend maybe 15 minutes every other month on…
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Monday, October 20, 2008
The Obligatory Presidential Election Post
After weighing my choices as to whether to sit out the presidential vote or not, I’ve decided that for the first time since 1992 I am going to vote for the Democrat on the ticket.
Some of you may be gasping right now. That’s OK. It took me a while to come around to the decision to vote for McCain. Oh…. you thought I was talking about Obama? Heh. He never had even a snowball’s chance in hell that I’d vote for him. Now I’m not being completely facetious when I call McCain a Democrat. He sounds a lot like the Democrat party of 20 or 30 years ago. Not the quasi-socialist fringe leftists we are faced with today. So it’s not so much that I fully support McCain but that I cannot sit by and allow Obama to gain access to the Presidency. That way lies madness.
I’m not sure there’s a single policy of Obama’s that I agree with (or that doesn’t have me yelling expletives whenever I hear it), but of all his quasi-socialist baggage, it’s his anti-freedom, anti-gun stance that I find the most offensive. Of course, Obama has been careful to try to work around his history on this, with weaselly statements about how he’s not going to take your ‘hunting guns.’ Which is double-speak for the fact that he is coming after everything else.
I’ve noticed that both he and his supporters are quick to change the subject when guns come up. I’ve been particularly fond of their tactic of insinuating that it’s stupid to care about guns when the economy is in such bad shape (Oh, but Obama supports the Second Amendment…. hey look… it’s a bank collapsing!). But I use the issue of the right to keep and bear arms as the primary test of how a candidate views his fellow citizens, and whether he thinks them capable of any semblance of self-governance. Only after he or she passes that test do I then consider all of the other issues.
When anyone asks why I place so much emphasis on the right to keep and bear arms, I always end up referring back to an old essay by L. Neil Smith, entitled Why Did it Have to be ... Guns?:
Over the past 30 years, I’ve been paid to write almost two million words, every one of which, sooner or later, came back to the issue of guns and gun-ownership. Naturally, I’ve thought about the issue a lot, and it has always determined the way I vote.
People accuse me of being a single-issue writer, a single- issue thinker, and a single- issue voter, but it isn’t true. What I’ve chosen, in a world where there’s never enough time and energy, is to focus on the one political issue which most clearly and unmistakably demonstrates what any politician—or political philosophy—is made of, right down to the creamy liquid center.
Make no mistake: all politicians—even those ostensibly on the side of guns and gun ownership—hate the issue and anyone, like me, who insists on bringing it up. They hate it because it’s an X-ray machine. It’s a Vulcan mind-meld. It’s the ultimate test to which any politician—or political philosophy—can be put. (Emphasis added)
So, of the choices available to me, I’ve decided to take Mr. Squishy Loophole over Mr. Evil Ban-it-all. It was really the only choice someone like me could make. So, given that, I will make my one and only political call-to-action of the season: If you’re a gun owner, or you believe in freedom, and you vote for Obama, you are essentially cutting your own throat. Don’t come crying to me in the middle of an Obama administration when he gets another AWB passed, or finds a way to hamper or encumber concealed carry across the country to the point where it’s practically useless. I’m not going to exhort you to go join a campaign or to join a party or to do canvassing or phone banking. I’m not a joiner and I’m not going there. But whatever you do, don’t vote for evil. No matter how smooth, slick, and enticing it may be.
Civil Rights • Guns • Politics • (4) Comments | Pop-up Comments • Permalink
Wednesday, August 06, 2008
Can’t We All Just Get Along?
I couldn’t help but notice a recent flare up in the long-running rancorous dispute between the adherents of the pistol design of Gaston Glock and that of John Moses Browning.
As someone who has owned, shot, and carried both designs, I really don’t get where all the acrimony comes from. Live and let live, I say, and let each carry what he or she feels most comfortable with.
Isn’t there room enough in our safes for both?
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Thursday, July 31, 2008
Random Gun Musings
I just received the most recent Cheaper Than Dirt catalog and couldn’t help but notice that they are carrying the ArmaLaser line of laser sights for Kel-Tec pistols. Not to disparage Kel-Tec, but the idea of adding a $159 laser to a $300 pistol seems a little like overkill to me. I have a P11 and it has a (DAO) trigger pull somewhere in the vicinity of 9 lbs. I find that my hands start to shake just before the trigger breaks because of the force I have to apply. It took a lot of practice for me to make peace with the trigger and get to the point where it was useful beyond 3-5 yards. The last thing I want is to try to follow the laser as it does a jig on the target.

I also saw that they were selling Lone Wolf Dist slide cover plate replacements in various colors. In particular, though, I think the blue one is a bad idea. Generally, blue is supposed to indicate a non-firing (or other “safe”) training replica (or at least that’s how I’ve always seen it used). Now I realize that this is only one small part of the gun, but it seems to cross a line in my mind that shouldn’t be crossed. It seems to me to that it could possibly lead to unnecessary confusion.

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Friday, July 25, 2008
Real Evil…
Have no doubt, there are evil people doing evil things out there:
Members of a multi-agency task force and a Texas Ranger are trying to develop leads in the shooting Wednesday of an Alvarado store clerk who died late Thursday at a Fort Worth hospital.
Karen Burke died at 11:04 p.m. Thursday at John Peter Smith Hospital, according to the Tarrant County medical examiner’s office.
Burke, 52, of Alvarado was shot early Wednesday while mopping the floor at the Shell Travel Center off Interstate 35W in Alavardo, police said.
The robber, whose features were concealed by a dark hooded sweatshirt, followed her through the door to the store after she had gone outside, possibly to empty the mop bucket. And then she was shot.
From the TV coverage I kept getting the feeling that this place was somehow familiar. I finally realized that I had stopped there a couple of times on my way back from Austin.
Anyhow, this case really brings home the idiocy of the advice to “just give them what they want and they’ll go away” that we often hear when there is a robbery. In this case, there was absolutely no chance for the store clerk to give this guy anything. Further, what he apparently wanted was for her to die. Which also illustrates the moral bankruptcy of the idea that everyone can be reasoned with if we’d just have enough ‘empathy’ or ‘compassion.’ How do you reason with someone whose first act is to shoot you?
Or, as Cowtown Cop puts it:
There is, and all ways have been, a portion of the human race who will use whatever weapon comes to hand to further their selfish ambitions. These folks are evil. They don’t feel any empathy or compassion for their fellow humans. They just don’t care, and there are a lot of them.
Would the clerk having a gun have prevented this? It’s impossible to say for certain. However, owning one and carrying it promotes situational awareness and preparedness for these sorts of situations. From what I saw on the video I would have pegged this guy as squirrelly from the get-go. It’s late July and the temperature is still in the high 80’s at 1:00am and he’s wearing a long-sleeved hoodie with the hood up. More than that, though, he appears to be wearing gloves, which would have set off all sorts of alarm bells in my head. He’s also acting suspicious by trying to shield his face from the video cameras.
Practicing good situational awareness is probably the most important part of all this, and even if one chooses not to carry a gun, it’s still important. In this case there wasn’t a lot of time to react, but there were still warning signs in the suspect’s dress and behavior.
It should be noted that I do not want this taken in any way as blaming the victim in this case. All responsibility for this incident belongs with the shooter. He’s an evil bastard and he deserves to be squashed like a bug. But we can learn from the incident and remind ourselves that violent encounters are often unexpected and they progress extremely quickly (i.e. it’ll be over before you can even get to your phone, much less dial 911). You have to always be on alert and prepared to react.
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Wednesday, April 30, 2008
ELGS Update
For those that might be interested, new show dates have been added to the DFW Gun Show page (mostly for the Big Town and Mesquite Rodeo locations).
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Friday, November 09, 2007
Surprised It Hasn’t Already Happened
While these “new” terrorism warnings might be the usual chatter, it’s probably prudent to take them seriously.
The FBI is warning that al Qaeda may be preparing a series of holiday attacks on U.S. shopping malls in Los Angeles and Chicago, according to an intelligence report distributed to law enforcement authorities across the country this morning. (Click here for full text.)
The alert said al Qaeda “hoped to disrupt the U.S. economy and has been planning the attack for the past two years.”
Law enforcement officials tell ABCNews.com that the FBI received the information in late September and declassified it yesterday for wide distribution.
While the moonbat contingent is out in force in the comments claiming this is the usual spin, I’m a bit surprised it hasn’t happened yet. It doesn’t require a great deal of sophistication, nor does it require lots of resources or planning. Heck, Tom Clancy even wrote a novel (not exactly his best work) that included mall attacks as part of the plot. And while Mr. Clancy isn’t a national security asset, he’s oddly prescient when it comes to ways to attack America (viz. Debt of Honor, with its 747-attack on the U.S. Capitol, written in 1994).
Anyhow, malls are soft targets, and malls in places like Chicago and Los Angeles are especially soft, given their silly but draconian (and likely unconstitutional) gun laws. It’s been nearly four years now, but my opinion has not changed (see Sterilization vs Immunization). The best defense is one that is distributed among the people. Relying on a centralized “authority” to respond and keep you safe is a recipe for heartbreak, disappointment, and likely death.
So maintain Condition Yellow, and if you’ve got ‘em, carry ‘em.
Guns • Preparedness • (4) Comments | Pop-up Comments • Permalink
Tuesday, November 06, 2007
No Tolerance, No Brains
Sometimes I can’t help but wonder if school “administrators” don’t have their brains sucked out when they take the job. In a textbook case of PSH, a Dallas elementary school suspended a 4-year-old pre-K student for bringing a key chain with a toy gun to school.
One Dallas mom is fighting back after her 4-year-old son was suspended from school for bringing a miniature toy gun key chain to class.
Elijah brought his new toy to his pre-kindergarten class at Casa View Elementary without permission, said his mom, Desiree Trevino. But she says a suspension is too harsh, and Elijah should have gotten a warning.
While the school district and the family agree that the trinket was obviously a toy, the DISD stands by their decision, citing a no tolerance policy.
As usual, I think “no tolerance” is a good euphemism for “no brains.” I saw this spokes-weasel on the news last night, and I don’t know how he could utter the following with a straight face.
“The message is please don’t bring toy guns or knives or anything that looks like it might be dangerous to school,” said Jon Dahlander, DISD spokesman.
What’s it going to take to get a little bit of common sense back in schools? If people get all freaked out and have a PSH reaction to a little keychain, I fear for the future of the current generation. The only thing that gives me hope is that perhaps when they grow up there will be a backlash against such stupidity.
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Friday, August 10, 2007
Stupid Excuse
I meant to comment on this on Wednesday, but things have been a bit crazy lately. The “tattoo bandit” decided to have a press conference to talk about her escapades. First, though, she seemed to be surprised by all the attention:
Surrounded by photographers, videographers and reporters from six TV stations and two newspapers, Harvey said she was surprised by all the media attention.
“I couldn’t believe that I was getting that much coverage,” she said. “I was freaking out. ... I couldn’t even go into Wal-Mart without people staring at me. That was not the reaction I wanted. I was trying to hide.”
I don’t know… maybe that whole armed robbery, carjacking, kidnapping thing might just be something that catches the public’s attention. But maybe I’m just strange that way.
But this isn’t the main topic I wanted to discuss. This is what was bugging me:
Phyllis Dawn Harvey, who became known as the “tattoo bandit” during a 12-day crime spree, said she never had any bullets in her gun.
I always hate it when people say “it wasn’t loaded.” Either as an excuse for poor gun handling or as a mitigating factor in a criminal case, it sets my teeth on edge. In real life, there’s no way to tell a gun is loaded without close inspection. If someone is pointing one at you or waving it around your best bet is to proceed as if it’s loaded. She’s just lucky that she didn’t encounter a police officer or an armed citizen.
In general, Texas law doesn’t seem to distinguish between loaded and unloaded (there is an exception for making a firearm accessible to a child). Either with regards to aggravated robbery or simple carrying, the law appears to regard a firearm as a deadly weapon. I think this makes sense, because as I mentioned above, there is generally no readily distinguishable feature that can help someone (at a distance and under the influence of adrenalin) tell if a gun is loaded.
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Thursday, July 12, 2007
Spam Blowback Continues
Despite removing all catch-alls, thereby killing the Joe Jobbers in their tracks, I still seem to be banned from sending email to certain people. Most notably people with AOL email addresses.
I had someone contact me yesterday via my Contact Form to ask some questions about the Marlin Camp Carbine, but my reply got bounced. AOL informed me that it was not accepting email from my address.
Now this is stupid on the part of AOL, since I never sent spam to their users. But they still put my domain into their blacklist of spammers, apparently because of the previous Joe Job crap.
Anyhow… if you try to contact me and you’re using AOL (or Earthlink) and you don’t hear back from me, you might want to investigate getting a less brain-dead email provider.
Computing • Off With Their Heads • Guns • (1) Comments | Pop-up Comments • Permalink
Monday, May 21, 2007
Indeed
Another Oleg Volk masterpiece.

Found via Tamara K.
Guns • Humor • (1) Comments | Pop-up Comments • Permalink
