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Yes, very terrible situation and my thoughts and prayers go out to the family, friends and the officers involved. Both officers were reported to be rookies with less than a year each. I know he was in his garage, but still falls back to the point of if the police show up to a possible burglary in progress call, don't be near there with a gun in your hand. Adrenaline is pumping, low light situation, misheard commands, etc all can lead up to a bad outcome.Diesel42 wrote:With respect Keith, it's my neighborhood. Mr Walker was in his garage watching the property with the alarm sounding. Woodhaven has a proactive neighborhood watch. I don't know what actions Mr Walker made. I hope the investigation determines what happened. This is a very sad incident for Woodhaven.
Nick
Seriously? On MY PROPERTY? Then we may as well all be disarmed if the police can come on our property and kill us just because we have a gun ---which btw, is not illegal. On occasion I wander around my property in the dead of night with an AR15 in hand --I don't think that gives the police the right to shoot me. Also, the accounts say he was standing in his garage, not wandering around. Here's what we know for sure, as most of the comments following the article reflect: if the situation was reversed, and this man, on his OWN PROPERTY, had mistakenly shot a police officer wandering around in the dark with a gun in his hand because he felt "threatened," he'd be in jail right now, he'd be charged with murder, and he'd go to prison. It wouldn't matter that he felt threatened, that it was dark, that he didn't realize they were police, that it wasn't intentional, or that he was on his OWN PROPERTY.puma guy wrote:Wandering around on your property with a visible weapon in the dead of night is certainly not advisable.
I look at this like vehicles taking the right of way. It may be your right, but a lot of people get killed by forcing that right of way.VMI77 wrote:Seriously? On MY PROPERTY? Then we may as well all be disarmed if the police can come on our property and kill us just because we have a gun ---which btw, is not illegal. On occasion I wander around my property in the dead of night with an AR15 in hand --I don't think that gives the police the right to shoot me. Also, the accounts say he was standing in his garage, not wandering around. Here's what we know for sure, as most of the comments following the article reflect: if the situation was reversed, and this man, on his OWN PROPERTY, had mistakenly shot a police officer wandering around in the dark with a gun in his hand because he felt "threatened," he'd be in jail right now, he'd be charged with murder, and he'd go to prison. It wouldn't matter that he felt threatened, that it was dark, that he didn't realize they were police, that it wasn't intentional, or that he was on his OWN PROPERTY.puma guy wrote:Wandering around on your property with a visible weapon in the dead of night is certainly not advisable.
Keith B wrote:I look at this like vehicles taking the right of way. It may be your right, but a lot of people get killed by forcing that right of way.VMI77 wrote:Seriously? On MY PROPERTY? Then we may as well all be disarmed if the police can come on our property and kill us just because we have a gun ---which btw, is not illegal. On occasion I wander around my property in the dead of night with an AR15 in hand --I don't think that gives the police the right to shoot me. Also, the accounts say he was standing in his garage, not wandering around. Here's what we know for sure, as most of the comments following the article reflect: if the situation was reversed, and this man, on his OWN PROPERTY, had mistakenly shot a police officer wandering around in the dark with a gun in his hand because he felt "threatened," he'd be in jail right now, he'd be charged with murder, and he'd go to prison. It wouldn't matter that he felt threatened, that it was dark, that he didn't realize they were police, that it wasn't intentional, or that he was on his OWN PROPERTY.puma guy wrote:Wandering around on your property with a visible weapon in the dead of night is certainly not advisable.
At this point we don't know all of the detials. A case of mistaken address, etc can all lead up to you being dead. The shooter may be in the wrong, but you are in the ground.