(TX) Bullet Grazes Frisco Homeowner During Shooting

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Drizzt

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Bullet Grazes Frisco Homeowner During Shooting

POSTED: 10:48 pm CDT March 21, 2008
UPDATED: 10:57 pm CDT March 21, 2008


FRISCO, Texas -- A bullet grazed a Frisco man during a shootout in his condo on Thursday.

Frisco police said Steve Geddie was lucky to have escaped alive after the shooting, which happened at his home on Hickory Creek on Thursday evening.

Geddie said he was in the bathroom when he heard an intruder breaking into his condo through the back door.

"So I'm sitting on the toilet (and) I hear this banging," he said.

Geddie said he crept through his bathroom, into his bedroom.

"(I) reached underneath my mattress, pulled up the shotgun (and) loaded up the chamber -- size one buckshot," he said.

Geddie then walked toward his living room, where he confronted the intruder, he said.

He said the man's gun was "literally right in my chest."

"My first instinct is to move to the side," Geddie said. "He grazed my shoulder on the first shot."

The man got two shots off, he said.

Geddie said he dropped the shotgun and then dove to the ground to pick it back up. Geddie said he pulled the shotgun up as the intruder headed out the door. He took a shot at the man, but missed just to the left of him, he said.

"I grabbed the shotgun up, pulled it up as he was heading out the door, and just missed to the left of him,"

"Otherwise, he would have had size-1 buckshot all through his thighs and butt," Geddie said.

Geddie's shotgun blasted 16 pellets and an 8-inch hole through his wall.

His wife, Kathryn, worked out late on Thursday. If she hadn't, she would have confronted the suspect alone, she said.

"Had it been me home, it could have been a completely different story that you're covering today," she said.

Steve Geddie, an Alaskan-born gun enthusiast, said homeowners should be prepared for incidents like he faced.

"I believe that every homeowner should be able to be prepared for self-preservation in the event that something like this happens," he said.

Geddie said his brain was the most powerful weapon he used during the incident. He was able to think his way through everything, he said.

http://www.nbc5i.com/news/15671775/detail.html
 
I remember when Frisco used to be way out in the 'boonies' from Dallas. Seems to have been absorbed after a while.

Good thing he was prepared. Scary stuff.

Geddie then walked toward his living room, where he confronted the intruder, he said.

IMO, not a good idea. You don't go looking for someone that has busted into your place. Stay put, aim at the door, call 911.

Seems to be the natural reaction though.
 
I saw the "re-enactment" the homeowner put on for the local news. The guy heard the intruder break in so he went to his bedroom and got a pistol-grip shotgun and then came back down the hallway from the bedroom.

Kind of came around a corner and the intruder already had his gun drawn and pointed right at the homeowner, who twisted away while at the same time dropping the shotgun.

By the time the homeowner got the gun back in his hands the intruder was just about out the door.

It seemed to me a couple of things went wrong. One the homeowner should have stayed put. Moving around he lost the element of suprise. Second, I don't see how the shotgun could have been in a ready to use position.

This guy might be better served with a handgun.
 
By the time the homeowner got the gun back in his hands the intruder was just about out the door.

It seemed to me a couple of things went wrong. One the homeowner should have stayed put. Moving around he lost the element of suprise. Second, I don't see how the shotgun could have been in a ready to use position.

This guy might be better served with a handgun.

I don't know. Given your critique, he would have done no better with a handgun than a shotgun.

I watched the video of the homeowner demonstrating everything. I don't see the video posted yet, but here is the story.
http://www.nbc5i.com/news/15671775/detail.html?dl=mainclick

I am just guessing, but chances are the combination of surprise, wounding, and then attempting to fire from a position on the floor (on his side) which he has probably never done in his life (position demo'd in the video), combined with the fact that he was using a pistol grip shotgun (difficult to aim well for most folks under good circumstances), lowlight, and that the suspect was moving, it is no surprise that he missed at close range.

Oh, and apparently he was firing his shotgun like a handgun, based on his demo. He showed how he had a one-handed grip on the gun, extended his arm, and fired.

Nice pro-gun and pro-self defense statement at the end...for all you who repeatedly claim how liberal and anti-gun news organizations are.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bullet Grazes Frisco Homeowner During Shooting

POSTED: 10:48 pm CDT March 21, 2008
UPDATED: 10:57 pm CDT March 21, 2008


FRISCO, Texas -- A bullet grazed a Frisco man during a shootout in his condo on Thursday.

Frisco police said Steve Geddie was lucky to have escaped alive after the shooting, which happened at his home on Hickory Creek on Thursday evening.

Geddie said he was in the bathroom when he heard an intruder breaking into his condo through the back door.

"So I'm sitting on the toilet (and) I hear this banging," he said.

Geddie said he crept through his bathroom, into his bedroom.

"(I) reached underneath my mattress, pulled up the shotgun (and) loaded up the chamber -- size one buckshot," he said.

Geddie then walked toward his living room, where he confronted the intruder, he said.

He said the man's gun was "literally right in my chest."

"My first instinct is to move to the side," Geddie said. "He grazed my shoulder on the first shot."

The man got two shots off, he said.

Geddie said he dropped the shotgun and then dove to the ground to pick it back up. Geddie said he pulled the shotgun up as the intruder headed out the door. He took a shot at the man, but missed just to the left of him, he said.

"I grabbed the shotgun up, pulled it up as he was heading out the door, and just missed to the left of him,"

"Otherwise, he would have had size-1 buckshot all through his thighs and butt," Geddie said.

Geddie's shotgun blasted 16 pellets and an 8-inch hole through his wall.

His wife, Kathryn, worked out late on Thursday. If she hadn't, she would have confronted the suspect alone, she said.

"Had it been me home, it could have been a completely different story that you're covering today," she said.

Steve Geddie, an Alaskan-born gun enthusiast, said homeowners should be prepared for incidents like he faced.

"I believe that every homeowner should be able to be prepared for self-preservation in the event that something like this happens," he said.

Geddie said his brain was the most powerful weapon he used during the incident. He was able to think his way through everything, he said.
 
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I don't know. Given your critique, he would have done no better with a handgun than a shotgun.

Either way, I thought dropping your gun in your most desperate moment of need was saved for B movies. Playing paintball, getting suprised always made me grip my gun tighter. In fact I had a bad habit of reflexivly shooting people who came leaping out of bushes, on my team or not. It made good lessons for why in real life you keep your finger off the trigger, and why it's a bad idea to leap out of bushes in front of someone with a gun.
 
Yes, dropping your gun is bad, but I am curious about this comment since you also saw the same exlusive NBC5i.com footage I did...

It seemed to me a couple of things went wrong. One the homeowner should have stayed put.

Do you honestly feel that being on the john and unarmed is a very defensible position to be in when you hear somebody breaking in? Heck, the guy even demonstrated where he was when the banging started.
 
This is just up the road from me and goes to show what we've been saying all along: no place is safe from crime.

Frisco has been somewhat absorbed by the metroplex and is considered higher-income / upper middle class by many. It's one of those places where the person being interviewed says "We'd never expect that to happen in this neighborhood...that's why we moved out here."

Yep, pays to always carry, even at home.

Take care,
DFW1911
 
Do you honestly feel that being on the john and unarmed is a very defensible position to be in when you hear somebody breaking in? Heck, the guy even demonstrated where he was when the banging started.

I thought in this situation getting your gun was a forgone conclusion. :banghead:

Then stay put.
 
Nice pro-gun and pro-self defense statement at the end...for all you who repeatedly claim how liberal and anti-gun news organizations are.

Maybe after the firing of Rebecca Aguilar the reporters have learned to be nicer to crime victims :)
 
Moral of the story: pistol-gripped shotguns are a less-than-ideal choice for defence. Get a rifle, or use a handgun if you must.
 
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