old gun, old man:


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wingman
April 30, 2004, 06:58 PM
51 Year Old Gun
Saves 83 Year Old Man
By Jim Herron Zamora - San Francisco Examiner Staff Writer
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2-23-00



A.D. Parker didn't pay much attention to the old revolver he kept stashed under his bed.

He bought the .38-caliber Smith & Wesson 51 years ago and by his own reckoning fired it only seven or eight times - and not at all for about 30 years. He rarely oiled the weapon and, for decades, just left it beneath a rug under his bed.

But in the one brief moment in his life when the 83-year-old Parker really needed a gun, it worked.

San Francisco police say Parker, apparently acting in self-defense, shot and killed an armed burglar who pried open the back door of his home in Hunters Point and tried to enter his bedroom.

"He was there at my bedroom door," Parker said. "I shot him just that once. . . . If I had waited a second longer, I don't think I'd be around to tell my story."

"I really wished that he had lived," said Parker, a widower who is often home alone. "I never thought I would kill another person. I just wanted to stay at home and mind my own business."

The intruder, Michael Moore, 49, was pronounced dead a short time after the shooting at San Francisco General Hospital with a gunshot wound in his upper chest.

Police said Moore, a San Francisco resident, was a convicted felon but gave no further details.

Parker said Moore had been carrying a large wrench and a crowbar at the time of the shooting. Police said only that Moore had been armed.

Police did not arrest Parker on Monday but said their investigation was not complete. Inspectors would not say whether they planned to recommend that the district attorney file charges against him.

The incident began at about 2 a.m. Monday when Parker was awakened by loud noises near the back of his home. At first, he didn't realize it was a burglar; he just assumed it was a rowdy neighbor.

"There are people who make noise around here even in the middle of the night . . . I thought maybe someone was unloading some lumber or something like that," Parker said. "I was laying in my bed trying to figure out where the noise was coming from. It took me a little bit before I realized the noise was coming from my back door."

As the intruder came closer to his bedroom, Parker said, he grabbed his .38 Special out from under his rug where it was wrapped in wax paper - untouched for at least two years.

"I put my finger on the trigger," Parker said. "Right as I got to the door of my bedroom, I was facing this person as he was coming in here."

The intruder was only inches away and moving toward him, Parker said.

"He was facing me up close so I unloaded that bullet right into him . . . then I slammed that (bedroom) door shut in his face and called police," Parker said. "I thought he had a friend with him. I thought the other guy was coming after me. I was real worried."

Parker was terrified and spoke to the 911 operator until police arrived, he said.

It's amazing that the gun still worked properly. Parker, a retired truck driver and shipyard worker, said he had bought the six-shot revolver in 1948 but hadn't fired it for several more years.

"I tried it out a couple times about 1952 or 1953," Parker said. "I wanted my wife to learn how to use it so we shot it a couple times each."

After moving to Hunters Point in 1962, Parker said, he fired the gun once or twice into the air to celebrate the New Year.

"I stopped firing that gun many years ago," he said. "I realized that if I shoot that gun in the air, someone could get hurt."

Parker said he might have fired the gun once in the 1970s but wasn't sure. His maintenance of the gun was sporadic. He used transmission fluid instead of gun oil as a lubricant.

Before Monday, he last checked the gun in early 1998 or late 1997.

"I never thought I would shoot that thing again," he said. "I never wanted to be a tough guy. But I guess I'm fortunate that gun still worked."

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Jim March
April 30, 2004, 07:23 PM
Try THAT with a slidegun.

boing
April 30, 2004, 08:30 PM
I bet a WWII era Colt woulda done it, too. :p

Cosmoline
April 30, 2004, 08:44 PM
"The intruder, Michael Moore, 49, was pronounced dead ..."

Don't toy with me like this!

denfoote
April 30, 2004, 08:53 PM
Police did not arrest Parker on Monday but said their investigation was not complete. Inspectors would not say whether they planned to recommend that the district attorney file charges against him.

It's a sad commentary when this even comes up for consideration!!
Here in AZ, the police probably would have thanked the man for ridding society of dangerous scum!!! :D

I'd like to say "only in Kalifornication", but I forget about The People's Democratic Republiks of Maryland, Illannoy, and New Jersey, to name but a few!!! :banghead:

Sounds like a good shoot to me. Now he has to worry about the lawsuits from the scum's family!!!

Josey
April 30, 2004, 09:40 PM
38 caliber. Unknown vintage ammunition. Terrified 83 YO. One shot. One body. NOT BAD!

Nick96
April 30, 2004, 09:52 PM
So .38 Special revolvers are obsolete & ineffective - uhmmmmm?? Apparently not.

Stephen A. Camp
April 30, 2004, 10:01 PM
Hello. It's www.cdnninvestments.com

Best.

Chuck Dye
April 30, 2004, 10:15 PM
I have been toying with starting a thread on thread titles, contrasting those obtuse, unhelpful mysteries with the hysterical, inflammatory, and fraudulent (member names withheld ;) ) but I just haven’t managed a postable essay. My most heartfelt thanks for resisting the opportuniy to use "Michael Moore shot dead in the act of 1st degree burglary!"

BluesBear
May 1, 2004, 05:35 AM
Shot placement.

Score one more for the good guys.

Tamara
May 1, 2004, 08:34 AM
Nice shootin', Tex! :cool:

J Miller
May 3, 2004, 11:44 AM
This is the exact senario I have commented on several times in responce to the articles about smart guns. Home defence guns are rarely maintained, rarely fired, rarely cleaned, and usually are just stuck somewere the owner, or whoever needs it can get to it.
If this had been one of these "programable, owner useable only guns", and had been treated in the same manner, I'd be willing to stand face to face with anyone and say flat out, it would not have worked.

A perfect example of the K.I.S.S. principle.


Home owner - 1
Bad guy....... - 0


Joe

Tropical Z
May 4, 2004, 10:32 AM
If the cops file charges against this guy,THEY should be put in prison!:cuss:
Too bad it wasnt the real Michael Moore being backed up by FeinSWINE.Two bullets could have worked wonders for this great nation of ours.

Dr.Rob
May 4, 2004, 10:42 AM
Tranmission fluid is the basis for Ed's Red version of gun oil.

Nothing wrong with it.

armoredman
May 4, 2004, 10:49 AM
Well done, sir, and a kudos to Smith for making a product that stood the literal test of time, and sporadic maintanance!:cool:

foghornl
May 4, 2004, 11:53 AM
Always a great day when the Good Guys get 1-up on The Sleaze.

lee n. field
May 6, 2004, 11:00 PM
Give the man a box of ammo and a medal.

Sylvilagus Aquaticus
May 9, 2004, 05:15 AM
I wonder if the verdigris on those old round nosed lead bullets added any lethality?

Icky!

Regards,
Rabbit.

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