Methinks this guy is in bad trouble

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
He shoots a couple of burglars while on the phone with the 911 dispatcher when the cops don't get there fast enough and the BGs are going to get away.

HERE is the video with the 911 audio.
 

unclehobart

New Member
I saw that on the news last night. I don't think he was charged up to that point... but making the national news always seems to make junior DA's a tad more froggy with prosecutions in order to make a name for themselves.
 

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
I saw that on the news last night. I don't think he was charged up to that point... but making the national news always seems to make junior DA's a tad more froggy with prosecutions in order to make a name for themselves.

The first thing that may save him is he is in Texas. You can shoot a criminal for a property crime there even if they are fleeing.


The second thing is that they may not be able to find a jury to convict him. People are getting really tire of the criminals having all of the rights and they have to stand back and take it.

They also are tired of the police telling them to let the (burglar, robber, rapist, etc) take what they want and then cl them. The problem is when the BG turns out to also be a killer. Does a citizen have the duty to allow them to take what they want also?
 

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
The guy's neighbors stood up for him when the Black Panthers tried to march on his house. Talk about being driven off on a rail!

http://www.breitbart.tv/html/8973.html

HOUSTON - Protesters critical of a homeowner who fatally shot two suspected burglars were confronted by hundreds of the man's supporters during a rally on the street where the killings occurred.

Yard signs declaring support for Joe Horn, 61, lined nearby streets Sunday in the Pasadena neighborhood where Miguel Antonio DeJesus, 38, and Diego Ortiz, 30, were killed Nov. 14.

Horn's supporters parked motorcycles along the block Sunday and jeered protesters who called for Horn to be prosecuted. The supporters waved American flags and hoisted signs reading, "We love our neighbor for protecting our neighbors" and "Burglary is a risky business."

Police officers in riot gear monitored the activities, but no arrests were made.
Horn's attorney has said his client believed the two men had broken into his neighbor's home and that he shot them only when they came into his yard and threatened him.

But that description is partly at odds with Horn's call to 911 in which Horn threatens to kill the men despite the dispatcher's urging that Horn stay inside his house.

"I support our rights as Americans to protect ourselves and support our Second Amendment rights," said Aaron Morrow, 43, one of dozens of bikers who revved their engines each time activist Quanell X attempted to speak.
Quanell X has said that Horn, who is white, should be charged with murder for shooting DeJesus and Ortiz, who were black. After Sunday's counter-protest, he said he doesn't know if the shootings were racially motivated but said he "wouldn't be surprised."

The families of the shooting victims were present Sunday.

"Our position is that we do not condone their actions. We condemn their actions," Quanell X said. "But Horn acted as police officer, judge, jury and executioner all at the same time."

Michelle Howell, who lives down the street from Horn, said she was in disbelief that the event had taken on racial overtones.

"First of all, this is a quiet place, secondly we've got neighbors of all different races. This has nothing to do with race," she said.

Maritza Munoz marched with the members of the New Black Panther Nation.
"Yes, they broke into people's houses, but it wasn't his right to kill them. What he (Horn) did was criminal," she said.

Horn has not been charged in the case. Pasadena police spokesman Vance Mitchell said the department will turn over its case to the Harris County District Attorney's Office in seven to 10 days. From there it is expected to be presented to a grand jury.
 

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
It was about time that someone stood up to these whiners. They glom onto every issue as a racial issue because that is what justifies their existence. Without it, they are nothing so they have to perpetuate it to their own ends.
 

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
:lol: The majority of Americans are moderate, Gonz. I can't imagine anyone calling them names Mr. Kettle. :lol:

I think he means the calling of the majority as "racists" even though most aren't. However, if you call someone something for a long enough period of time it is inevitable that they will eventually live up to that title.
 

SouthernN'Proud

Southern Discomfort
I think he means the calling of the majority as "racists" even though most aren't. However, if you call someone something for a long enough period of time it is inevitable that they will eventually live up to that title.

Cool. From now on I insist on being called Bill Gates.
 

chcr

Too cute for words
I think he means the calling of the majority as "racists" even though most aren't. However, if you call someone something for a long enough period of time it is inevitable that they will eventually live up to that title.

Ahh, a Gonz translator. Interesting, but ultimately useless. :shrug:

Cool. From now on I insist on being called Bill Gates.
:D

KO Bill. What's fer breakfast?
 

Professur

Well-Known Member
And now, it comes out that the two thieves were also illegals. With documents for several aliases. One of whom had already been deported once (back to Colombia) for cocaine related charges. I'd wager once this info becomes common knowledge, castle shootings are gonna skyrocket.
 

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
I think he means the calling of the majority as "racists" even though most aren't. However, if you call someone something for a long enough period of time it is inevitable that they will eventually live up to that title.

BINGO!

Although, looking at how they live, most Americans are far more right than not.
 

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
There are accusations of racism being hoisted HERE and that's just a friggin' beauty contest!

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — In the business of crowning beauty queens, there's one thing you'd think they'd get right: crowning the right beauty queen. Miss California USA organizers say they got that wrong, but corrected themselves Thursday by crowning Miss Barstow, Raquel Beezley, a 21-year-old waitress they said rightfully earned the title.

...

Silva, 24, lives in L.A.'s Koreatown and is of Ecuadoran and Mexican descent. Was she too ethnic?

...

Beezley's mother Christine Parrish said she was upset about speculation her daughter, was bumped up because she appears less ethnic. "I heard somebody calling her a whitey! It's sad," she said, noting that Beezley is one-fourth Filipino, had won a pageant in Mazatlan, Mexico, and judged a pageant in the Phillipines.
 
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