Wednesday, April 25, 2007

It May Not Be Enough?

Damon Wells and his home appear no longer safe.

The .40-caliber handgun that Wells carries legally for defense may not be enough to protect the 25-year-old man and his home in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood.
I should say, not, "reporter" Gabriel Baird. Don't you read your own newspaper?
Police took a .40-caliber Smith and Wesson firearm from Wells as evidence, the police report shows.
So now the poor guy's got a vengeful mob of thug apologists terrorizing him, and no way to protect himself.

It sounds like we as a society ought to miss young "Ace Boogie" as much as we will "Boonie."

5 comments:

Jay said...

I am so sick of "this criminal thug was really the victim" mentality. The "youth" was killed in self defense while committing a felony.

Looks like concealed carry worked and everyone is upset.

Anonymous said...

Damn funny none of these cretins have any compassion for the victims of the attempted robbery or the future victims this thug would have robbed.

They want justice, my ass. If they wanted justice they would turn in his accomplice who fled and demand he be charged with murder.

BobG said...

"Police took a .40-caliber Smith and Wesson firearm from Wells as evidence, the police report shows."

Which disproves the idiotic statement from some people that nobody needs more than one gun; obviously this person needs a backup to protect against the people who may be coming to exact revenge on him.
I'd like to hear a reasonable explanation of why they needed to confiscate his firearm; it's not like they need to test it to see if it was the weapon used, that is already known.

Ken said...

The windows are boarded up at the house because someone smashed them. I leave the drawing of conclusions to the interested reader.

the pistolero said...

The .40-caliber handgun that Wells carries legally for defense may not be enough to protect the 25-year-old man and his home in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood.

Of course. Everyone knows you need at least a 10mm. ;-)
"They want justice." Sounds to me like justice was indeed served; it just wasn't the kind of "justice" they wanted, as their idea of justice is just as twisted as their ideas on what warrants something like "respect."