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DC LEADERS PROPOSE CONCEALED HANDGUN PERMITS

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

WASHINGTON (AP) – Residents of the nation’s capital will be able to get a permit to carry concealed handguns outside the home, but only after they provide a specific reason for needing one, officials said Wednesday.

Mayor Vincent Gray and other city officials said they plan to propose legislation that would make the District of Columbia similar to a half-dozen states, including Maryland, where residents can be denied a concealed-carry permit if they can’t show a need for one. The Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge to Maryland’s law last year.

In July, a federal judge struck down the District’s ban on carrying handguns outside the home. The judge put his ruling on hold to give the city time to rewrite its gun laws.

The District is seeking to let the police chief decide whether people have a reason to carry a concealed firearm, and officials said living in a high-crime neighborhood would not be a sufficient reason to obtain a permit. People who’ve received death threats or have been the victims of domestic violence are among those who could be granted permits.

“It has to be personalized. It has to be something specific,” D.C. Attorney General Irvin Nathan said.

Alan Gura, an attorney for plaintiffs in the lawsuit, said the proposal did not comply with the judge’s order.

“In America, the police don’t determine what rights we have good reason to enjoy,” Gura said. “You don’t need a good reason to speak, to worship, to vote or to carry a gun for self-defense.”

In 2008, the Supreme Court struck down the city’s 32-year-old ban on handguns. Since then, the District has required gun owners to register their firearms every three years, complete a safety course and be fingerprinted and photographed, among other requirements.

The concealed-carry requirements, which the D.C. Council will vote on next week, would be even more restrictive. Those seeking a concealed-carry permit would have to complete a “more extensive” safety course than what’s required for gun owners. Non-residents would also be able to get licenses if they meet the same standards. Open carrying of firearms would remain illegal under the proposal.

Gray, a Democrat and a member of the group Mayors Against Illegal Guns, made clear that he was establishing the concealed-carry program reluctantly, citing last year’s mass shooting at the Washington Navy Yard and the street violence in Chicago as examples of the need for stronger gun laws.

“I happen to be one that really does not support having people walking around with guns, concealed or otherwise,” Gray said.

Permit holders would also be barred from carrying guns in locations including government buildings, public transportation, bars and restaurants, stadiums and places where public officials need to be protected.

Earlier this year, a federal appeals court struck down California’s requirement that residents must show they faced a “clear and present danger” to receive a gun permit, although the ruling is on hold pending an appeal. Gura said the judge in the District’s case followed the logic of that ruling, which found that residents only need to show a desire for self-defense.

The other states where residents must show a reason to get a permit are Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York.

Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/sep/17/dc-leaders-preparing-to-rewrite-gun-laws/#ixzz3DcQavGrA
Follow us: @washtimes on Twitter

Filed Under: In The News, Political Arena

NBC’S 3 STEPS FOR HOME INVASION DEFENSE

Saturday, September 13, 2014

NBC’s 3 Steps for Home Invasion Defense: Use Wasp Spray Illegally, Treat Invader ‘Like Royalty’ and Don’t Own a Gun

[IGNORANCE IN THE MEDIA NEVER CEASES TO AMAZME ME.]

According to FBI crime statistics quoted by NBC’s TODAY Show, home invasions in America are happening at the alarming rate of 135 per day.

That frightening fact combined with some recent, high profile invasions at the homes of Oscar-winner Sandra Bullock and NBA star Ray Allen prompted reporter Jeff Rossen to produce a segment titled,  “How to protect your family from home invasion.”

For a large part of the four-minute story, Rossen spoke with Wallace Zeins, a retired NYPD detective and former hostage negotiator. The law enforcement veteran shared his tips for thwarting home invasions. However, many Blaze readers will notice something missing from the segment. This would also be something they consider the first and best option for dealing with intruders — firearms.

The option of using a gun to protect yourself in a home invasion is never mentioned during the TODAY Show story.

NBC’s advice seems to contradict suggestions made by Vice President Joe Biden. On more than one occasion, Biden has told Americans (including his wife) that a shotgun is the best tool for frightening off would-be intruders.

Over 18 months ago, the vice president shared his “get a double-barrel shotgun” advice with Parents magazine.

During a 2013 town hall meeting in California, Biden again advised people to choose a shotgun — this time over a semi-automatic AR-15, stating, “Well, you know, my shotgun will do better for you than your AR-15, because you want to keep someone away from your house, just fire the shotgun through the door.” (Biden’s thoughts on a shotgun being better protection than an AR-15 were refuted by gun experts.)

What tips did NBC’s segment give viewers to block the bad guys?

The TODAY Show expert told viewers to prepare themselves for intruders by having two items next to their beds:

Car keys
Wasp Spray
How can car keys keep you safe? The former NYPD detective suggested keeping car keys on the night stand for easy access to an alarm. In case you hear someone breaking in, Zeins advises pushing the alarm button on the key fob. He did not mention a solution for high-rise apartment dwellers or those who their park cars beyond the normal range of the key fob transmitter (some of these key fob remotes become useless beyond 20-30 feet).

The second intruder defense item the TODAY Show suggests you keep close to your bed — wasp spray.

wasp-spray

Zeins claimed that wasp spray is as effective as pepper spray.

A Seattle family would argue that Zeins’s advice was wrong. In December of 2013, Ken Boonstra tried using wasp spray to fend off a man who had broken into their home and was attacking his wife. The spray did not stop the attack; only a well-placed and very sharp steak knife was effective in ending the conflict.

TheBlaze found several “prepper” websites and online stores that sell “prepper” supplies that advise against using wasp spray or bear spray. These groups state that bug spray is rarely as useful as pepper spray and there are also possible legal complications involved in using wasp spray as a weapon.

Spraying an intruder with a neurotoxin-laced bug spray is a violation of Federal law. Additionally, Spectracide’s “Wasp & Hornet Killer” tells the consumer, “Never use indoors.” These two warnings are printed at the very top of cans of wasp spray.

 

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Should a beeping car alarm or wasp spray fail to prevent a home invasion, the NBC report suggests being polite and directing the bad guys to your cash and valuables. The former detective told Rossen, “You want to treat them like royalty.” He added, “On top of that, you don’t want to lie to them.”

Watch the segment

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Filed Under: In The News

HER HUSBAND MADE SURE SHE KNEW HOW TO SHOOT BEFORE HE DIED

Saturday, September 6, 2014

How to Shoot: The Time They Spent at the Range May Have Saved Her Life.

Dramatic 911 audio captured the moment a 47-year-old Arizona woman shot an intruder after he had broken into her home and allegedly attacked her.

The woman, identified as Cynthia, says her husband made sure to teach her how to shoot before he died. Her gun knowledge came in very handy. When she heard someone trying to break into her home, she immediately grabbed her gun and took a defensive position in the bathroom.

When the intruder, Michael Lewis, got inside, he allegedly physically attacked the woman and forced her to defend herself. He’s lucky to be alive.

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The Arizona Republic provides a transcript of the intense 911 audio released by police on Wednesday:

“They’ve tried my front door, my front door, and now they’re trying to break in my back gate…,” Cynthia tells the 911 operator at one point. “I have a gun in my hands. I’m terrified.”

Later, “Somebody is on my back porch.” And then, “Please help me, please!” as the operator assures her that help is on the way.

“They’re coming out as fast as they can,” the operator says. “Have you heard any voices?”

Cynthia: “Hurry, hurry! They’re coming in right now, please, please, please!

As it turns out, the police weren’t coming quickly enough. Lewis broke into the bathroom and started attacking Cynthia. So she shot him.

Lewis: “Ow! (Expletive.) What was that? What was that? What was that? (Expletive) did you do?”

Her answer was classic. “Did you think you could beat me half to death?”

Lewis: “I’m sorry. I’m sorry…”

Cynthia: “You bet you’re sorry you nasty thing.”

Lewis has been in the hospital for about a month after being shot, but he will appear before a judge for sentencing next month.

Listen to the audio here:

Filed Under: In The News

THIS GUY BUILT A TOWER TO SHOW HOW BAD FEDERAL REGULATIONS HAVE GOTTEN

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Federal Regulations: Wait for When It Starts to Collapse on Top of Him.

Massive.

Gargantuan.

Unreadable.

There are plenty of words to describe the enormous expanse of federal red tape, but Patrick McLaughlin, a senior research fellow at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center, took the maxim “a picture is worth a thousand words” to heart when he set out to visualize the growth in federal regulations between 1950 and 2013.

In 1950, federal regulations were nothing to sneeze — in the neighborhood of 10,000 pages, according to McLaughlin — but maybe a smart person with plenty of time on their hands could get through it.

 

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How much regulation has been added between then and now?

Watch the video to see (spoiler: it’s a lot) and witness the immense stack nearly crush McLaughlin, helping to prove his point about red tape:

Filed Under: Political Arena

UTAH CITIES PUSHED TO PURGE GUN RULES BY NATIONAL GROUP

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Second Amendment » U.S. gun-rights group urges repeal of local firearm laws in conflict with state code.4372819_G

An elected Holladay City Council member, Gunn for years has been an outspoken board member for the Gun Violence Prevention Center of Utah.

He wasn’t aware of the Second Amendment Foundation’s so-called pre-emption project (relying on state laws pre-empting local firearms restrictions) or its demand letter sent to the city attorney in his own community.

“The question I would pose to them is: ‘Do you really think it is in the public’s interest to eliminate these ordinances?’ ” Gunn said.

Pointing to the major legal victories of gun-rights advocates before the current U.S. Supreme Court, the retired attorney noted that most of those dealt with the right to keep a gun in one’s home for self-defense.

“So I’m a little surprised that Second Amendment folks are now expanding the scope of their attack to include guns in cemeteries and guns in parks. But maybe I shouldn’t be surprised.”

Even so, Gunn said if Holladay does have any ordinances in conflict with state firearms law, “we probably will change them.”

Utah’s turn » Miko Tempski, the foundation’s general counsel, said Utah is the seventh state to undergo the city-by-city scrutiny of gun laws. Researchers found 49 ordinances that conflicted with state law.

Eight have responded so far to the letters that went out July 8 — Draper, Herriman, Ivins, Park City, Sandy, Utah County, West Point and West Valley City. All agreed to review their ordinances and some confirmed that they would remove the targeted provisions.

Sandy City Attorney Walter Miller promised prompt action, noting that the City Council’s “respect for the Second Amendment closely mirrors that of your organization.”

<<FULL STORY>>

Filed Under: In The News, Political Arena

INCONVENIENT CRIME STATISTICS FOR GUN CONTROL ADVOCATES

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Chicago’s crime rate has dropped since Illinois became the 50th state in the nation to adopt a concealed carry law last year, the Washington Times reported.

600x39610Chicago Police Department Superintendent Garry McCarthy attributed the decrease to “intelligent policing strategies” and said cops confiscated more than 1,300 illegal guns in the first quarter of the year.Robberies are down 20 percent this year, according to Chicago Police Department statistics. Burglaries are also down 20 percent, while motor vehicle thefts are down 26 percent.

But Richard Pearson, executive director of the Illinois State Rifle Association, said it’s clear to him what’s driving the decrease — and it’s not the police. He said the department “hasn’t changed a single tactic.”

“It isn’t any coincidence crime rates started to go down when concealed carry was permitted. Just the idea that the criminals don’t know who’s armed and who isn’t has a deterrence effect,” Pearson told the Times.

By July 29, Illinois had 83,183 applications for concealed carry and had issued 68,549 licenses, the Times reported. Pearson predicted that 100,000 Illinois citizens will have concealed carry permits by the end of 2014.

Individual permits cost about $600 with 16 hours of classes required. Despite the hurdles, Pearson expects that about 300,000 state residents will ultimately have permits before the increase levels off.

Cook County, which includes Chicago, has the state’s largest number of concealed carry applications, with 28,552 requests, but per capita population, fewer than 1 percent in the county have permits.

The Crime Prevention Research Center found in a July study that 11.1 million Americans have permits to carry concealed weapons, a 147 percent increase from 4.5 million seven years ago. The center estimated that after concealed carry laws were passed, homicide and other violent crime decreased by 22 percent.

Florida has the most concealed carry permits, at nearly 1.3 million, according to the Times. Texas is second, with more than 708,000. Hawaii has the least, at just 183.

If Pearson’s projection of 300,000 concealed carry permits proves correct, Illinois would be comparable to Virginia, which has 363,274 permits, and Alabama, which has 379,917 permits.

Filed Under: In The News

HOW THE GOVERNMENT BECAME THE PARENT POLICE

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Surveillance cameras, government agents listening in on your phone calls, reading your emails and text messages, monitoring your spending, mandatory health care, sugary soda bans, anti-bullying laws, zero tolerance policies, political correctness: These are all outward signs of a government that believes it knows what is best for you.

Indeed, as I document in my book “A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State,” this is the tyranny of the Nanny State: marketed as benevolence, enforced with armed police, and inflicted on all those who do not belong to the elite ruling class that gets to call the shots.

This tyranny disguised as “the better good” explains the recent rash of parents getting charged with negligence and arrested for leaving their kids alone for any amount of time, whether at a park, in a store, in a car, or in their front yard – another sign of what C.S. Lewis referred to as tyranny exercised by “omnipotent moral busybodies.”

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Shutterstock

For example, working mom Debra Harrell was arrested, spent 17 days in jail, lost custody of her daughter, and if convicted, could spend up to 10 years in jail all because she let her 9-year-old daughter play alone at a nearby park. Single mother Shanesha Taylor, unemployed and essentially homeless, was arrested for leaving her kids in her car during a 40-minute job interview.

For the so-called “crime” of allowing her 7-year-old son to visit a neighborhood playground located a half mile from their house, Nicole Gainey was interrogated, arrested and handcuffed in front of her son, and transported to the local jail where she was physically searched, fingerprinted, photographed and held for seven hours. She was forced to pay almost $4,000 in bond in order to return to her family. Gainey now faces a third-degree criminal felony charge that carries with it a fine of up to $5,000 and five years in jail.

A Connecticut mother was arrested after her 7-year-old, who wasn’t wearing a helmet, fell off his scooter and allegedly injured himself. Patricia Juarez was arrested after letting her 7-year-old son play at a Legoland store in the mall while she did her shopping. Tammy Cooper was arrested, jailed overnight and charged with child endangerment for letting her kids ride their scooters alone in the cul-de-sac outside her suburban home.

These incidents are worsened by what journalist Josh Harkinson more broadly refers to as the “criminalization of the working poor,” oftentimes targeting parents “struggling to make ends meet with no better child care options.”

Nevertheless, despite the arrest-driven uproar over what constitutes negligent parenting and the government’s attitude that it – in concert with Social Services – knows what is best for your kids, it turns out that kids aren’t really in any greater danger today than they were 40 years ago, at least not from abductions by strangers.

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Shutterstock

Unfortunately, having allowed our fears to be codified and our actions criminalized, we now find ourselves in a strange new world where just about everything we do is criminalized; not just our parenting decisions.

As with most of the problems plaguing us in the American police state, we are the source of our greatest problems. We have relinquished control over the most intimate aspects of our lives to government officials who, while they may occupy seats of authority, are neither wiser, smarter, more in tune with our needs, more knowledgeable about our problems, nor more aware of what is really in our best interests.

Yet having bought into the false notion that the government does indeed know what’s best for us and can ensure not only our safety but our happiness and will take care of us from cradle to grave – that is, from daycare centers to nursing homes – we have in actuality allowed ourselves to be bridled and turned into slaves at the bidding of a government that cares little for our freedoms or our happiness.

The lesson is this: Once a free people allows the government inroads into their freedoms or uses those same freedoms as bargaining chips for security, it quickly becomes a slippery slope to outright tyranny.

When our own government no longer sees us as human beings with dignity and worth, but as things to be manipulated, maneuvered, mined for data, manhandled by police, conned into believing it has our best interests at heart, mistreated and and jailed if we dare step out of line, we are no longer operating under a constitutional republic. Instead, what we are experiencing is a pathocracy: Tyranny at the hands of a psychopathic government, which “operates against the interests of its own people except for favoring certain groups.”

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Shutterstock

So where does that leave us?

Having allowed the government to expand and exceed its reach, we find ourselves on the losing end of a tug-of-war over control of our country and our lives. And for as long as we let them, government officials will continue to trample on our rights, always justifying their actions as being for the good of the people.

The choice before us is clear. It is the choice between tyranny and freedom, dictatorship and autonomy, peaceful slavery and dangerous freedom. The choice between manufactured pipe dreams of what America used to be versus the gritty reality of what she is today.

Most of all, perhaps, the choice before us is that of being a child or a parent, of obeying blindly, never questioning, and marching in lockstep with the police state or growing up, challenging injustice, standing up to tyranny, and owning up to our responsibilities as citizens, no matter how painful, risky or uncomfortable.

As author Erich Fromm warned in his book “Civil Disobedience”:

“At this point in history, the capacity to doubt, to criticize and to disobey may be all that stands between a future for mankind and the end of civilization.”

John Whitehead – The Rutherford Institute13730360.1134095

John W. Whitehead is president of The Rutherford Institute and author of A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State. Whitehead also drafted anti-drone legislation which is making its way through state and local legislatures.

Constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead is founder and president of The Rutherford Institute and author of “A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State.” Whitehead can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.

Filed Under: Personal Experience/Reviews

GRANDMAS, BOTH ROBBERY VICTIMS, DECIDED ENOUGH WAS ENOUGH

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

A Pair of Grandmas, Both Robbery Victims, Decided Enough Was Enough. Now They Carry Concealed Handguns — and They’re Not Alone.

Konnie Couch and Robin Reatherford-Willoughby, friends for the last decade, have a number of things in common.

They’re both in their 50s. They both have sons who’ve served in the Navy. They’re both grandmothers. They both run businesses across the street from each other in Aurora, Indiana.

And in 2011, both of their homes and businesses were robbed.

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It got them thinking they never wanted to be crime victims again, nor did they want to see other women go through what they did.

Now the duo share another commonality: They both are licensed to carry concealed firearms — and do so at all times.

But they also cofounded Women Armed and Ready, a group dedicated to “empowering women in education, preparation and competence in firearm safety and the use of firearms.”

“The thing of it is, bad things happen to good people all the time, and, if something bad is going to happen, it’s gonna happen without warning,” Couch told the Cincinnati Enquirer. “It’s gonna be very quick, and you’ve gotta be prepared for it.”

Women Armed and Ready has 35 registered members, ranging in age from 50 to 81. And all, the Enquirer noted, have concealed carry licenses. They meet two times a month, sometimes for classes at Big Daddy’s Bar-B-Q & Lil’ Mama’s Fixins’, which Willoughby owns, and of course, for target practice at the Laughery Valley Fish and Game in Versailles.

It appears that in an era of hotly contested views on gun control in America, the number of women siding with gun ownership is rising: A 2013 Gallup poll noted that 15 percent of gun owners are women, an increase from 13 percent in 2005, the Enquirer reported. Apart from WAR and other regional groups, the paper noted, there are numerous national female gun groups, including Armed Females of America, Women & Guns and the Well Armed Woman.

“[Our main objective is] to get women trained and where, if they have to … they would be able to react and save themselves,” Couch told the Enquirer. “Or at least make a very valiant attempt to save themselves.”

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The WAR members mostly practice stationary shooting at the target range but are looking to expand to tactical shooting, which involves firing at a moving target and mimics real-world scenarios.

“Just because you carry a gun doesn’t make you Annie Oakley,” Couch told the newspaper. “If you draw that firearm, there is a chance you are going to kill somebody.”

Members each have their reasons for carrying firearms; Barb Maness is a 75-year-old widow who lives in a secluded area.

“My gun is the answer to anybody who thinks I’m an old lady living alone,” she told the Enquirer. She said that when he was alive, her husband — concerned that she’d be alone after he died — suggested a number of options, including remarriage, selling the house and getting a dog.

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“For some reason he never suggested getting a gun to defend myself,” she said during a break from target practice.

But besides trips to the firing range and meetings twice a month, WAR members are also encouraged to lean on each other for support and pick up the phone if they ever need to talk, the Enquirer added.

In the end, however, the primary focus is firearm competency — and being prepared the next time a crook wants to take advantage.

“We don’t have to be that victim,” Couch told the group. “We don’t have to be that statistic.”

Filed Under: In The News, Special Recognition

OPEN CARRY ACTIVIST TAKES A BOLD STAND AGAINST COUNTY ORDINANCE

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

‘Don’t Point That F***ing Gun at Me!’: Open Carry Activist Takes a Bold Stand Against County Ordinance… and Wins

His walk in the park was no walk in the park, so to speak, but a Wisconsin man’s public stand against unlawful open-carry restrictions seems to be having the desired effect: his county is changing its policy.

The man, Bill Polster, recorded himself on a walk through Calumet County Park last month while he carried two guns, and after 10 minutes, he was confronted by law enforcement.

Polster swears near the beginning of the encounter as he realizes one of the officers is aiming a rifle at him.

“Don’t point that f***ing gun at me!” he yells. ”He’s got a gun pointed at me, that’s bulls***!”

The other officer tells Polster that county ordinance prohibits carrying loaded firearms through the park, and while Polster is able to cite state laws that should supersede the county rules, the officer nevertheless takes and unloads both of Polster’s weapons.

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The officer winds up giving Polster a warning for the incident.

Content warning: strong language

After video of the incident was posted to YouTube, county officials met, reviewed the rules and decided that the county ordinance would need to be updated to comply with state law, WLUK-TV reported.

And while the new ordinance — which is expected to ban hunting in the park but allow open carry — won’t be drawn up until September, Chief Deputy Brett Bowe of the Calumet County Sheriff’s Office told WLUK that the sheriff’s department would not enforce the old blanket ban.

“Obviously there is no hunting in the county park,” Bowe said. “Those were covered under that ordinance. We’re going to have to redo that ordinance to cover those specifically while allowing open-carry.”

And while Polster said the officers who confronted him could have handled the situation better (and he also apologized for his own swearing, saying he was “not proud of the vulgarity”), Bowe defended his officers’ work.

“They handled the incident appropriately,” Bowe said, adding, “Once [Polster] understood what we were doing, he was cooperative with that, and we handled it right there.”

If the county goes through with the ordinance change, halting open-carry is a situation police won’t have to handle again.

 

Filed Under: In The News

SHE REALIZED IT WASN’T HER HUSBAND DOWNSTAIRS, SHE GRABBED HER GUN

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

When She Realized It Wasn’t Her Husband Downstairs, She Grabbed Her Gun. When She Called 911, She Couldn’t Believe What She Was Told.

She was upstairs resting following recent hip replacement surgery when she heard a bunch of “commotion” coming from the first floor of her home in Holmes Beach, Florida. NJ Logan says she quickly realized it wasn’t her husband as he was out playing bridge.

So the 80-year-old grandmother jumped into action and armed herself with a handgun.

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“I don’t know what was going on in my mind. Honestly, all I wanted was my gun,” she told WTVT-TV, adding that she “really didn’t want to have to shoot anybody.”

Police say at least one suspect smashed the bottom glass of the door and cut out the screen in order to gain entry into the home. Logan reportedly shouted out warnings to the intruder, making it known she had a gun.

But when the armed woman dialed 911, she was surprised at the dispatcher’s advice.

“When I called 911, she kept saying, ‘put the gun down, put the gun down.’ And I said, ‘I’ll put the gun down when I see the police,’” Logan recalled.

And she did exactly that. It’s possible that the 911 dispatcher wanted Logan to drop her gun so that police didn’t mistake her for an armed intruder. However, it was a request that the woman refused to fulfill with the possibility that there were still one or more criminals in her house.

It’s likely that Logan’s warning scared off the suspected burglar. Police are still looking for the suspect or suspects.

The 80-year-old says she will certainly not be getting rid of her firearm, especially after the scary incident. She told the news station that she is a strong believer in having “guns inside your house” because no one “has the right to break into your private domain.”

“I’ll definitely have the gun up there,” she added, “that is for sure.”

Filed Under: Self Defense

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