Texas man kills burglars as 911 operator listens

lab

Senior Member
Texas man kills burglars as 911 operator listens
Case may test state's self-defense laws

Associated Press
Published on: 11/26/07

Houston — The cha-chick of a shell entering a shotgun's chamber rattled through the 911 line just before Joe Horn stepped out his front door.

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Horn, 61, had phoned police when he saw two men break into his neighbor's suburban Houston home through a window in broad daylight. Now they were getting away with a bag of loot.

"Don't go outside the house," the 911 operator pleaded. "You're going to get yourself shot if you go outside that house with a gun. I don't care what you think."

"You want to make a bet?" Horn answered. "I'm going to kill them."

He did.

Admirers, including several of his neighbors, say Horn is a hero for killing the burglars, protecting his neighborhood and sending a message to would-be criminals. Critics call him a loose cannon. His attorney says Horn just feared for his life.

Prosecuting Horn could prove difficult in Texas, where few people sympathize with criminals and many have an almost religious belief in the right to self-defense. The case could test the state's self-defense laws, which allow people to use deadly force in certain situations to protect themselves, their property and their neighbors' property.

'Do you want me to stop them?'

Horn was home in Pasadena, about 15 miles southeast of Houston, on Nov. 14 when he heard glass breaking, said his attorney, Tom Lambright. He looked out the window and saw 38-year-old Miguel Antonio DeJesus and 30-year-old Diego Ortiz using a crowbar to break out the rest of the glass.

He grabbed a 12-gauge shotgun and called 911, Lambright said.

"Uh, I've got a shotgun," he told the dispatcher. "Uh, do you want me to stop them?"

"Nope, don't do that," the dispatcher responded. "Ain't no property worth shooting somebody over, OK?"

Horn and the dispatcher spoke for several minutes, during which Horn pleaded with the dispatcher to send someone to catch the men and vowed not to let them escape. Over and over, the dispatcher told him to stay inside. Horn repeatedly said he couldn't.

When the men crawled back out the window carrying a bag, Horn began to sound increasingly frantic.

"Well, here it goes, buddy," Horn said as a shell clicked into the chamber. "You hear the shotgun clicking, and I'm going."

A few seconds passed.

"Move," Horn can be heard saying on the tape. "You're dead."

Boom.

Click.

Boom.

Click.

Boom.

Horn redialed 911 and told the dispatcher what he'd done.

"I had no choice," he said, his voice shaking. "They came in the front yard with me, man. I had no choice. Get somebody over here quick."

Lambright said Horn had intended to take a look around when he left his house and instead came face to face with the burglars, standing 10 to 12 feet from him in his yard.

Horn is heavyset and middle-aged and would have been no match in a physical confrontation with the two men, who were young and strong, Lambright said. So when one or both of them "made lunging movements," Horn fired in self-defense, he said.

Family members of the two shooting victims have made few public statements.

Diamond Morgan, Ortiz's widow, who has an 8-month-old son with him, told Houston television station KTRK that she was stunned by Horn's statements on the 911 tape. "It's horrible," she said. "He was so eager, so eager to shoot."

The Associated Press could not find a telephone listing for Morgan.

Memories of Bernard Goetz

The case brought back memories of Bernard Goetz, the New Yorker whom some hailed as a folk hero after he shot four teenagers he said were trying to rob him when they asked for $5 on a subway in 1984.

Goetz was cleared of attempted murder and assault charges but convicted of illegal possession of the gun he used to shoot the youths. He served 8 months in jail and was ordered by a jury to pay $43 million to one of the teenagers he shot.

Pasadena police were still investigating Monday and planned to present their findings to Harris County prosecutors within the next two weeks, police spokesman Vance Mitchell said. From there, it is expected to be presented to a grand jury. In the meantime, Horn remains uncharged.

Texas law allows people to use deadly force to protect themselves if it is reasonable to believe they could otherwise be killed. In some cases, people also can use deadly force to protect their neighbors' property; for example, if a homeowner asks a neighbor to watch over his property while he's out of town.

At issue is whether it was reasonable for Horn to fear the men and whether his earlier threats on the 911 call showed he planned to kill them no matter what, said Fred C. Moss, who teaches criminal law at Southern Methodist University in Dallas.
 

knifemaker

Senior Member
Somebody that just robbed my neighbor and comes on my property to do me or my family harm, probably gets it too, unless they turn and run.
 

REMINGTON710

Senior Member
wasn't this posted the other day?


still the robbers got what they needed
 

jody7818

Senior Member
wasn't this posted the other day?


still the robbers got what they needed

Yeah...I think it was posted the other day. I'm typically an easy going type person who can get along with anybody, and there's not much that gets me riled up. But burglars and thieves are one of the few that really push my buttons :banginghe
 

flyingt

Senior Member
It was posted the other day and I think the link to the audio 911 call was on there. My opinion is shoot em all and let God sort em out. The only good robber is a dead one. If this guy would of let them go whos to say they wouldn't have done it again the next day and maybe came accross someone that was inside a home and they killed them. I say goodbye to bad rubbish!! oh did anybody notice the names of the robbers? Im thinking they are not from Texas originally.
 

leroy

Senior Member
bet you havent heard the last of this though be it criminal or civil. But I agree he was in the right.
 

Kreed5821

Gone but not forgotten.
Turns out it was illegal aliens. Mr Horn should have NO problem at all. He waited for seven minutes for the police to arrive. They came up right after he shot the criminals. I wonder if one or more cops were near but waiting for more backup to arrive. Just seemed to perfect of timing that within seconds of the shots they were suddenly there.

Texas law states: http://home.houston.rr.com/rkba/gunlaws.html

"A person is justified in using deadly force against another to protect his property to the degree he reasonably believes the force is immediately necessary to prevent the other's imminent commission of arson, burglary, robbery, theft during the nighttime or criminal mischief during the nighttime, and he reasonably believes that the property cannot be protected by any other means."

"A person is justified in using force or deadly force against another to protect the property of a third person if he reasonably believes he would be justified to use similar force to protect his own property, and he reasonably believes that there existed an attempt or actual commission of the crime of theft or criminal mischief."

According to that it don't even have to be your neighbor for you to protect someone's property.

Here is a link to the 911 call: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7jq...modules.php?name=Forums&file=viewtopic&t=1147
 

Texas Bill

Senior Member
Ah, news from home! God Bless Texas! It is about time a man took a stand against the rampant crime in this society.
 

mike bell

Senior Member
Theres more to the story.

He allegedly shot the two people in the back as they were running across the yard away from him.

He may face murder charges now.
 

GoldDot40

Senior Member
That audio tape says a lot.....the guy obviously 'wanted' to kill somebody. The dispatcher was literally begging him not to go outside. While the law is what it is, I personally don't think the shooter will walk in this case. Bravo if he does, but his lawyer better be good.
 

Craig Knight

Senior Member
Illegals?????????????????????????????? Who In Their Right Mind Would Have Thought That Could Happen!!!!! Sorry If It Offends Anyone But Oh Well They Got What They Deserve,
 

Tomboy Boots

Turkey Killer
That audio tape says a lot.....the guy obviously 'wanted' to kill somebody. The dispatcher was literally begging him not to go outside. While the law is what it is, I personally don't think the shooter will walk in this case. Bravo if he does, but his lawyer better be good.

Okay I'm gonna be the minority here and say he was "Absolutely Wrong" Probably not a popular opinion, but if we all take the law into our own hands... He definitely sounded like he had every intention of killing someone, it didn't sound like self-defense, he wanted to do it, and I personally don't think anyone's "property", including my own, is worth taking the life of another. I promise you I would only kill another person in order to protect the life of another, with there being no alternative. And if he shot them in the back as they were running away, he should not walk, IMO... Law enforcement is here for a reason and a purpose, let them do their job, even though sometimes it may seem like that doesn't happen, it does not justify murder:(
 

RackNBeardOutdoors

Senior Member
I commend Horn, where the guys illegal? I can't belive his wife/g/f would say the comment she did, her man was doing an unlawful act, if a few more guys like Horn did that, then we wouldn't have near the amount of crime that we do
 

LLove

Senior Member
had he been clever enough to hang up before saying "im gonna kill them" he'd have nothing to worry about..

i applaud him
 

Tomboy Boots

Turkey Killer
You have now alerted every thug and thief that all they have to do is walk on your property, clean you out and drive away with your vehicle(s) and you wont do a thing about it except call the police. The criminals will be gone by the time the police get there.
Of course "thats why you have insurance"..right?
Hopeless..just plain hopeless.
Douglas

So clue me in as to why we have laws??? The penalty for breaking and entering, and burglary, is not the death penalty. And I still believe that no property is worth taking the life of another human being... I quess it comes down to the value you place on a human life. Of course that is why I have insurance. You can take money and replace property, but you can't give someone back their life. And he will live with his conscience, but from the sound of that article he didn't have one to begin with. Where do you draw the line? Gonna shoot someone over your deerstand? Wallet? Jewelry? Maybe a poacher shooting deer from a truck because they are stealing deer from everyone else? Maybe a trespasser? So every person then comes to the conclusion that they will decide what "Justice" is, and act accordingly, and as long as they don't get caught (or recorded), they have nothing to worry about...
Hopeless..just plain hopeless.

I can see the respect ya'll have for law enforcement and the law reflected in your replies....
 
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