Hollywood (Florida) teen shoots intruder

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Car Knocker

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http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/lo...sfla-features-headlines&track=mostemailedlink

Hollywood teen shoots intruder after father says on phone, `Do what you have to do'

By Marlene Naanes
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Posted May 25 2006


Hollywood · Javaris Granger wished his father was there instead of him.

His father was on the phone, urging Granger, 15, to get the gun they used for shooting practice. "Do what you have to do," his father said.

Granger did. He aimed the gun and fired at the violent intruder.

Family and friends are awed by Granger's bravery. "Anyone who takes charge like that is definitely a hero," said Maxine Chandler, his mother.

Before the McArthur High School freshman fired the gun, he kept a cool head and remembered his father's shooting and safety lessons during the chaos early Saturday morning.

His father, Lyndon Chandler, had left the house to visit a friend at the hospital. His wife heard a knock at the door and, thinking it was her husband, opened it. A stranger grabbed at her; she pulled free and slammed the door.

It was 3:30 a.m.

Granger woke with a start, hearing his mother's frantic voice and something slamming against the front window.

He ran out to the dark living room and saw his mother screaming as a man, cursing and muttering, threw a bicycle at the window.

Granger yelled at the intruder to leave, while his mother called his father on the phone and handed it to her son. The stranger began turning the doorknob, intent on getting in the home.

Within seconds, Granger ran into his parents' bedroom, found the safety box, unlocked it and loaded two guns for him and his mother. He ran back to the living room as the intruder threw a bicycle at the door and started kicking it in.

His mother was too shaken to take a gun, so she ran to another bedroom where her daughters and visiting family members were hiding.

"I was real scared and nervous, but I knew I had to stay focused on what I had to do because my mom and the kids were there," Granger said.

The next moment the man kicked down the door and jumped into the living room, yards from Granger.

"I didn't want to hurt anybody, so I fired off a warning shot," the ninth-grader said.

The intruder didn't leave until four shots later.

Since the incident, friends and family members have called to congratulate the modest teenager who didn't tell his story until news reports made it hard to hide. His three sisters call him brave, his dad is very proud of "the man of the house" and his mom says her family would have died if the man police later identified as Keil Jumper had laid hands on them.

Jumper, 22, is in Memorial Regional Medical Center with two gunshot wounds. He has a string of arrests dating to 2001, including one for attacking a Seminole Reservation Police Officer the day before he allegedly broke into Granger's home.

Granger does not face charges. The second oldest child in the family, he often goes to the range at Markham Park to practice shoot with his father. He was never a victim of crime before, but calmly went through all the gun safety steps his father taught him, even after one gun jammed after the first shot Saturday.

He even locked up the guns after Jumper left, before he checked on his mother. "My husband tried to get everyone to learn the safety of a gun," Chandler said. "It paid off."

Marlene Naanes can be reached at [email protected] or 954-385-7922.
 
Well done.

I was momentarily tempted to nitpick about the warning shot, but I've never been in his position. Shooting someone is no small matter, and I might do the same thing, however inadvisable it might be.

Well done.
 
I think he did almost everything tight. I can understand the warning shot, given he had never been in a shooting situation before. He kept shooting until the trouble went away. However...

I'm willing to nit-pick just a little. The only thing for which I'd fault him would be for locking the guns away after the perp ran off. If the guy was that crazy that he wouldn't leave until after the 4th shot, I'd have been thinking the odds of him returning would be rather high.

For what it is worth, I taught my kids that, should they ever have to get a gun while home, to keep that gun with them and ready until I or a cop(s) showed up. Then, after the cop(s) left, get one of the hidden guns and keep THAT one handy until I came home.

Pops
 
Jumper, 22, is in Memorial Regional Medical Center with two gunshot wounds. He has a string of arrests dating to 2001, including one for attacking a Seminole Reservation Police Officer the day before he allegedly broke into Granger's home.

A kid has to save his family's lives because some judge let the criminal walk away? What's wrong with this picture?
 
Before the McArthur High School freshman fired the gun, he kept a cool head and remembered his father's shooting and safety lessons during the chaos early Saturday morning.

I can just hear the anti-gun crown cringe.

Within seconds, Granger ran into his parents' bedroom, found the safety box, unlocked it and loaded two guns for him and his mother.

The gun was also locked up and secured the way gun-grabbers want. But if they had their way the kid wouldn’t have any access to them.

Jumper, 22, is in Memorial Regional Medical Center with two gunshot wounds. He has a string of arrests dating to 2001, including one for attacking a Seminole Reservation Police Officer the day before he allegedly broke into Granger's home.

When will criminals learn? We don’t have those sensible gun laws like California and New York that serve to protect our criminals. Sooner or later braking into a Florida home is likely to become a death sentence.
 
The gun was also locked up and secured the way gun-grabbers want. But if they had their way the kid wouldn’t have any access to them.
And also the way many gun-owners with kids want it. Its a choice they have to make - both options with potential risks.
 
I'm sure the family is very proud of this young man. He did a great job and kept his family safe! If I was the father I think the gift of a Remington 870P would be in order for the young man to keep in case he doesn't have as much time in the future :)
I vaguely remember a home invasion shooting when I was young in Texas I belive and the shooter was a young guy about the same age. It was a good shoot and there was all this hype in the media about gun control and all that garbage. My dad sent the young man a letter of support and box of ammo :cool:
 
The gun was also locked up and secured the way gun-grabbers want. But if they had their way the kid wouldn’t have any access to them.
And also the way many gun-owners with kids want it. Its a choice they have to make - both options with potential risks.

Exactly, I was trying to make the point that it should be up to the gun owner to take the responsability for properly storing his weapon the way he chooses. It shouldn't be forced on all of society to store weapons the way gun-grabbers think they should be stored. The far left is fond of telling people what's best for them and how to live rather than letting them make their own choices.
 
Attacking people or breaking into homes here in Florida can be a very dangerous thing to do and frankly if it was my hobby, I'd head for either MA or CA.
And I'm really glad he was able to scare him off without having to kill him. That would be tough on a 15 years old kid.
 
We need to see more of this in the news and less of the crap they like to show. A positive show of force where the outcome is living people and not dead ones.
 
Notice that in a life threatening situation they called the husband/father instead of 911. Wonder what hospital has visiting hours at 3:00AM?
 
Well done but he [and the father] have to be educated to understand that when a violent criminal is in your home that's not the time for warning shots.
 
For all you guys who think that wounding the b.g. was best for the shooter; let's wait a while to see if the b.g. or some of his friends come back to finish the job. ;)
 
Serendipity
For all you guys who think that wounding the b.g. was best for the shooter; let's wait a while to see if the b.g. or some of his friends come back to finish the job.

So out of fear of retaliation he should have just let the man in and then sit around hoping that the police would show up in time.I DON'T THINK SO. I think the young man did a very good job. I would prefer the criminal was dead but this way the young man doesn't have that on his mind. Maybe the b.g.knows that this family probably will be prepared if he decides to come back.
 
I hope those warning shots didn't find their way to a neighbors house.

Regardless, this kid is well on his way to being a first rate sheepdog.
 
OUTSTANDING.

Things like this probibly happen dozens of times a day, but unless there is some sensational aspect to the story most go unreported.

THR should start a fund where whenever someone defends themself they get a THR t-shirt or something.

Kid is a hero.

BRAVO.
 
Good job to the kid and the father. But uhh.. what about the mom? No disrespect to the family, but she declined to hold the gun when an intruder was at the door and left the job to her own son? Sounds like the father should've given some pointers to the mom, too. Don't mean to be the voice of caveat, but that's the first thing I noticed.
 
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