(FL) Man dies after breaking into home

Status
Not open for further replies.

Drizzt

Member
Joined
Dec 24, 2002
Messages
2,647
Location
Moscow on the Colorado, TX
Man dies after breaking into home

By SETH ROBBINS
Staff Writer

Last update: October 31, 2005

DAYTONA BEACH -- A 44-year-old man who broke into a Mulberry Street house Sunday night, fought with its two residents and collapsed as police led him out in handcuffs died later at Halifax Medical Center, authorities said.

Paul and Shelly Laughman were in their house on the 600 block of Mulberry Street about 6:30 p.m. when a man punched their front door. Shelly ran to lock it, but the man kicked in a plastic window and clawed his way into her home.

"He had a crazy look in his eyes," Shelly said, "and he mumbled something that sounded like I'm not here to hurt you."

Shelly, 36, screamed for her Husband, who was sleeping in the other room. He dashed over and wrestled with the man in their living room. While the men were wrestling, Shelley called police and grabbed a shotgun from a closet.

Paul, 52, pinned the man on the floor and Shelly aimed the shotgun at him, she said.

Paul let the man up slowly and said to him, "We've called the police. We've got a gun. Just go."

The man stared at them for a moment; the shotgun still aimed at him.

The man then rushed at Paul again, the couple said. Shelly aimed the shotgun and pulled the trigger, but the safety was still on and the gun never fired. Eventually, Paul would need the help of a neighbor to subdue the man again.

Police officers entered the house and the man continued to fight with the officers as they took him into custody. Officers placed the man in handcuffs and were walking him to a patrol car when he collapsed, said police spokesman Sgt. Al Tolley. They performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation on the man and called in rescue workers. An EVAC ambulance took the man to Halifax where he was pronounced dead about 6:45 p.m..

"No weapon of any kind was used by police," said police Lt. C.H. Fordham at the scene.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement and the Daytona Beach police will conduct an investigation as to the cause of the 44-year-old man's death, Tolley said. The man's name was withheld Sunday night until his family could be notified.

The Laughmans are left to wonder why he chose their house.

"I have no idea why he picked our yard," Shelly Laughman said, unnerved by the whole experience. "That guy could've killed us, and I would've killed him if I could get that safety off."

http://www.news-journalonline.com/NewsJournalOnline/News/EastVolusia/03NewsEAST03103105.htm

sounds like someone needs practice manipulating the safety on that shotgun. If you never practice with it, how are you going to know how to use it?
 
sounds like someone needs practice manipulating the safety on that shotgun. If you never practice with it, how are you going to know how to use it?


+ 1
 
Paul, 52, pinned the man on the floor and Shelly aimed the shotgun at him, she said.

Paul let the man up slowly and said to him, "We've called the police. We've got a gun. Just go."
Bet he won't do that again. :what:
 
You know, I clicked thinking that this was going to be another instance of the media taking a good shoot and making it sound like the guy stepped into the house and just dropped dead... and danged if he didn't actually do it :)
 
Exactly the problem I have with my wife. She knows "how" to shoot and she knows to grab a gun...but she will not practice with me. I just can't get her to go to the range. I really don't want to wait untill after an incident, hoping we survive, to get her to come to an understanding of the need. I'm glad this couple came out so well. At least they joined forces and won!
Mark.
 
Hence the reason why I don't like safeties. It could've killed that homeowner and his wife. I know...practice with it and all.

"Wendy, light of my life...I'm not gonna hurt you. I'm just gonna bash your brains in."

I see 'death' kicked in however, like in Final Destination. Cheats once, has a heart attack.
 
First mistake: exiting bedroom w/o firearm in hand

Sleeping, and no loaded firearm? Not! Husband should have come charging with the shotgun blazing! This is EXACTLY the reason I carry 24/7. Someone here had a thread about gun in the bathroom...good enough rationale right here.

Doc2005
 
Apparently it is true that a 12 gauge is the most feared gun; this guy dropped dead after having one pointed at him.
 
Guy was a raving psychotic to break into a house by crawling through a window AFTER being detected by the residents.

He fought on and didn't seem to have a rational motive. This is 99.9% a guy on some serious (illegal) drugs.


Morale of the story: Safeties only make perp safe.


Why does this stuff happen to folks with A] no guns, or B] folks with guns that cannot use them effectively.


I'd like to see a guy like this break into some IDPA champion's house and get pummled by 15 rounds of 9mm in about 3 seconds. That or break into some skeet champ's house and get both sides of an over/under emptied into the face/chest in .5 seconds.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top