Sunday, July 1, 2012

Case Study of a Home Invasion Attempt

Let's take a look at an application of some of what we have discussed already. Consider the following actual case study:

GREENVILLE COUNTY, S.C. -- A 68-year-old Greenville County woman pulled a gun on a man who tried to force his way inside her home, deputies say.

The woman and her friend, Diane Gordon, said they had seen the man walking on Cutler Street.

"This fellow had been pretty much canvassing the neighborhood all day," Gordon said.

The man said he was looking for his keys and he was going door to door.

Nick Robertson said the man also stopped at his house.

"It just didn't sound right, so he left after he saw there were too many people -- too many men -- in the house."

The man borrowed a flashlight from Gordon's friend, and later in the day, at about 7:30 p.m., he came back to her house and asked to use her phone.

Gordon said, "She is pretty sharp and she actually had a gun. She was scared because he wouldn't go away. He kept knocking on the door."

She said she did not let the man inside but allowed him to use her phone from the porch.

The incident report says the man pushed open the door, pulled a gun from under his shirt and told her to "Get back in the house."

"When he pulled his gun, she pulled her gun and he said for her to get in the house and she said she would kill him first," Gordon said.

The man froze, and then ran away.

Zach Hinton, with the Greenville County Sheriff's Office, said the man is white, about 40 years old, average height and he was using the name Eric. He had receding, light-brown hair and was wearing a light-colored T-shirt and blue jeans.

Greenville County deputies are still investigating this case. Deputies said the woman had an active concealed weapons permit and had every right to use it to protect herself.

Read more:
http://www.wyff4.com/news/30168387/detail.html#ixzz1jZOeb8h8
Did you catch the "Interview" process in this story? If not, read it again.

The Interview was his initial request was to borrow a flashlight. What was meant as an act of kindness by the lady was interpretted by the thug as compliance. His later request after returning was to use her phone. He expected this would allow him entry to her home, but she was too smart for that. She wanted to keep him on the porch. Perhaps a better idea would have been to offer to call someone for him if he gave her the number through the door. This way she could be helpful without putting herself in danger. But, it is easy to play arm-chair analyst.

Fortunately, not only was she smart enough to sense something was wrong and listen to her intuition, she was also physically and mentally prepared to do what was necessary to live. We must all do the same.

The fact this guy only displayed a weapon after he was attempting to force his way in, means he may have been prepared to use it. We will never know. Had she not been armed and had the mental determination to use it, things could have been disasterous!

It reminds me of a famous movie line, "That's not a knife; this is a knife!" Imagine the thug's surprise when he determined that his Interview was wrong and he chose the wrong person to mess with! It was enough to make him run away like the coward that he is!

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