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Oklahoma woman shoots intruder - wow

cmayna

DILLIGARA?
Donator
The last sentence really got me.


(01-05) 01:19 PST Blanchard, Okla. (AP) --

Authorities don't plan to file charges against an Oklahoma woman who fatally shot a New Year's Eve intruder at her house while she had a 911 dispatcher on the phone, but the intruder's alleged accomplice has been charged in the death.

A 911 tape released to Oklahoma City media outlets Wednesday reveals that 18-year-old Sarah McKinley asked a Grady County dispatcher for permission to shoot the intruder. McKinley's 3-month-old son was with her when she shot Justin Shane Martin, 24, at her Blanchard mobile home.

"I've got two guns in my hand. Is it OK to shoot him if he comes in this door?" McKinley asked the dispatcher.

"Well, you have to do whatever you can do to protect yourself," the dispatcher is heard telling McKinley. "I can't tell you that you can do that, but you have to do what you have to do to protect your baby."

Oklahoma law allows the use of deadly force against intruders, and prosecutors said McKinley clearly acted in self-defense. According to court documents, Martin was holding a knife when he died.

"Our initial review of the case doesn't indicate she violated the law in any way," Assistant District Attorney James Walters told The Oklahoman newspaper.

However, prosecutors have charged his alleged accomplice, 29-year-old Dustin Louis Stewart, with first-degree murder. According to authorities, Stewart was with Martin but ran away from McKinley's home after hearing the gunshots.

"When you're engaged in a crime such as first-degree burglary and a death results from the events of that crime, you're subject to prosecution for it," Walters said.

Stewart was arraigned Wednesday and was being held in the Grady County jail. A bond hearing was set for Thursday. His attorney, Stephen Buzin, did not immediately respond to a message left at his office Wednesday night.

According to court documents, Martin and Stewart might have been looking for prescription drugs. McKinley said it took the men about 20 minutes to get through her door, which she had barricaded with a couch.

She said her husband had died about a week earlier on Christmas Day after being hospitalized with complications from lung cancer earlier that month.


http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 637S07.DTL
 
Wow. I think that makes for a pretty rough holiday season. Husband dies on Christmas and she kills an intruder on new years. Crazy.
 
She said it took 20 minutes for the guy to break down the door--where were the police/sheriff? As it was a county dispatcher, I guess the mobile home was in a rural area, but 20+ minutes is still a pretty long response time? Maybe the counties are a lot larger in Oklahoma?
 
It takes me a good 10-12 minutes to get to town and I'm close by my own standards. That is why there are loaded weapons around every corner. By the time the law got here, it would to be the cleanup crew.
 
Lots of parts of the county I'm in that could easily be 20 minutes.

Only two people are present at the scene of a crime - the victim and the criminal.
 
If this happened more often crooks would think a lot more before busting into someones home---I have all my guns in a safe except my 9 MM pistol which has two loaded clips in the bag next to it, I would not have any problem shooting a intruder whom I thought was going to harm the grandaughter or wife.
 
Gotta concur about lengthy response times when you're out in a rural area of a county. I live in one of the largest counties in the SC. For a deputy to respond in 20 minutes (FORGET about less than that!), is a quick response. I also live just over 15 minutes from the county seat (Sheriff's office location). It comes down to size of the area and number of deputies available (or on duty!).
 
Warren v. District of Columbia[1] (444 A.2d. 1, D.C. Ct. of Ap. 1981) is a U.S. Court of Appeals case in which three rape victims sued the District of Columbia because of negligence on the part of the police. a 4-3 decision the court decided that Warren was not entitled to remedy at the bar despite the demonstrable abuse and ineptitude on the part of the police because no special relationship existed. The court stated that official police personnel and the government employing them owe no duty to victims of criminal acts and thus are not liable for a failure to provide adequate police protection unless a special relationship exists.

People are free to decide how best to protect their families; for myself, though I completely support our local law enforcement, I will never trust my families safety solely to them...
 
Most people don't honestly don't know what you posted Stump. Kinda scary isn't it? In SC I am not REQUIRED to arrest even a murderer! It's a professional (and morale) obligation, but not a legal requirement. We only have one law here that actually dictates law enforcement WILL make an arrest for it's violation, criminal domestic violence!


p.s. Sorry to get off topic a bit.
 
This story made the local news last night. Complete with footage of mom, son and scumbags.

fd
 
"Jack1966" said:
She said it took 20 minutes for the guy to break down the door--where were the police/sheriff? As it was a county dispatcher, I guess the mobile home was in a rural area, but 20+ minutes is still a pretty long response time? Maybe the counties are a lot larger in Oklahoma?

I've said it before and will continue saying it... when seconds count even in the best area the police are only 5-10 minutes away.

If I lived in a non castle doctrine state I would move, period.

Glad to see she took care of business and I love it when stories like this make the news because you know other would be thugs are likely to hear about it and just maybe think twice before they go kick in someone's door.
 
It made the national NBC news too. She used a double barrel shot gun. At least that's what she pointed , demonstrating for the news. Also showed the fat dumb asss accomplice. Who is now up on murder charges. And he was the smart one, He ran away when he heard the shots.
 
A friend from Krav posted the attached on his facebook page this morning...seemed to fit this thread.
 

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"Shaun" said:
20 minutes to break into a mobile home?

Along withgeneral stupidity, since they were after drugs I'm sure they were probably high. Why else would you keep at it for 20 minutes?
 
"Jack1966" said:
She said it took 20 minutes for the guy to break down the door--where were the police/sheriff? As it was a county dispatcher, I guess the mobile home was in a rural area, but 20+ minutes is still a pretty long response time? Maybe the counties are a lot larger in Oklahoma?

30 miles outside of Oklahoma City, and only 3 deputes covering a 12,000 sq mile area.
 
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