7/1/2008 4:24:03 PM
Okay, so you acknowledge the fact that you have no statistical evidence supporting your opinion and that your statements of facts are based solely off of anecdotal evidence?That's fine and all, if that is what you are presenting, but don't present it as any sort of fact, because it is far from it.
7/1/2008 4:30:33 PM
I haven't weakened anything. Like I said, I agree that Horn should get off scott-free. Now, in regards to the way in which people use deadly force, that is another topic for discussion. I don't believe that Horn tried to avoid killing these criminals, I believe he meant to end their lives.[Edited on July 1, 2008 at 4:46 PM. Reason : -]
7/1/2008 4:31:22 PM
monky supporting my opinion of what?I know the DC gun ban did wonders to control gun violence in DC. Need those stats? Google them.I also know that a dead criminal wont commit another crime 100% of the time. Pretty rock solid numbers there.
7/1/2008 4:36:26 PM
I don't think he should get off scott-free for the simple fact that the 911 dispatcher was yelling at him and telling him not to go outside. It was clear from the beginning that Horn meant to kill these people. Listen to the tapes and think if this man is calling to phone in something for the authorities to take care of or if the man is calling to establish some sort of defense for killing someone.The cops were on scene within a minute of him shooting those people, they would have been caught.
7/1/2008 4:37:22 PM
7/1/2008 4:41:15 PM
7/1/2008 4:42:03 PM
Unfortunately, Horn should get off scott-free, because of the clear lack of legislation on the books. From a legal standpoint, it's only fair to release Horn. However, this provides incentives for future legislation to correct this loophole in Texas.
7/1/2008 4:43:20 PM
7/1/2008 4:46:32 PM
7/1/2008 4:49:58 PM
^^well some people get fed up with burglars being able to steal peoples' shit and never ever having to face consequences...lets say I have $30,000 worth of property stolen from me...not only are they taking $30,000 worth of property from me, but they're taking all the time and work I put in in order to be able to buy those things...they're taking a chunk of your life...FUCK them being able to get away with it because the cops don't care and the justice system is fucked...Mr. Horn had had enoughand i think the failure of both federal and local govt/cops is very relevant...maybe Mr. Horn wouldn't have felt the need to get involved if he had a smidgen of faith that the cops might show up in a reasonable amount of time, that these people would be caught and prosecuted, that his neighbor would have everything returned to him, etc...but thats not how the legal and judicial system work...in theory yes, in reality hell no^so should we just accept that people will go around stealing your stuff and hardly ever getting caught and be like "oh well i guess somebody broke into my house and stole the stuff i worked hard for, sucks for me?" or maybe we should "let the authorities handle it" even when their idea of handling it is filing a report and putting it in the back of a drawer never to see the light of day again?]
7/1/2008 4:50:11 PM
7/1/2008 4:51:33 PM
7/1/2008 5:00:41 PM
7/1/2008 5:01:57 PM
i'm sure horn's neighbor's house had a sign on it that said "break into my locked house, i'm an idiot"apparently you're content with how our justice system works...i have absolutely no idea why, but thats your opinionbtw great point with the article from the town of cary...the guy only committed a mere 31 crimes before he was caught]
7/1/2008 5:02:05 PM
7/1/2008 5:02:30 PM
7/1/2008 5:09:22 PM
7/1/2008 5:12:40 PM
you're right...the police will protect you and all of your stuff and if a bad person tries something with you, the police will stop him...just keep thinking thatoh and good job completely missing the point about the sign on his houseyou are an idiot for leaving your bike on your porchhorn's neighbors didnt leave anything outside...the burglars actually broke into his house to take his property...maybe he shouldve padlocked all his possessions inside his house too?and who "wish(es) that gun toting vigilantes have free reign on a common thief when they catch him robbing his neighbor?" i see you're still putting extreme viewpoints in peoples mouthes to try and make shitty points]
7/1/2008 5:15:03 PM
7/1/2008 5:16:53 PM
I think Boone said it best
7/1/2008 5:37:29 PM
I've maintained throughout that Horn should be released, but that the state law should be re-evaluated. Not all citizens are like Horn, and I can see the right to use deadly force to protect "property" as a potential problem for victims in the future.
7/1/2008 6:22:23 PM
How so? Can you describe any situation where the law would be violated that it would not have been violated had force not been authorized by the law?
7/1/2008 6:33:28 PM
I think those fuckers got what they deserved. Of course some whiny liberal will be like "ohh but they were victims of society to which pushed them to a life of crime; and they could have been rebilitated"
7/1/2008 6:56:53 PM
they may very well have been pushed into a life of crime in a rough society...in their native countries of Colombia...but not here in the US where they shouldn't have been illegally in the first place]
7/1/2008 7:00:26 PM
Stealing ham to feed a family merits death by shotgun according to your logic. Even when the ham is actually your neighbors and not yours... and regardless of the fact that no one will die because of stolen ham. Clearly we won't agree on this point so I won't continue the discussion, but this type of attitude in regards to using deadly force without provocation is exactly why America needs a federal system to help regulate short-sighted state laws.
7/1/2008 7:12:20 PM
^ no these guys were likely stealing to get money to buy heroin or put hydraulics on their low-riders.BTW i completely disagree with your comment on federalism. I believe the federal gov't already encroaches to much on areas of law that should be left to the state. If you don't like the laws of a state; i hate to sound cliche' but GTFO! Being a liberal green anti-gun anti-death penalty person then move from Texas to Seattle. u and schmoe can live in liberal hippy paradise together. Besides a prime example of why i disagree with you can be seen in California. California decided that it was acceptable and good for its people to allow doctors to prescribe medical marijuana. The federal gov't whose current policies on heavily influenced by alternative "interests" (big pharma) are against it.
7/1/2008 7:19:09 PM
i'm not going to touch the ham example, but lets say the only thing they were stealing was a $200 dvd player and nothing else...no $200 isnt worth dying or killing over but i still think this is an example of someone fed up with constantly seeing honest people get taken advantage of and violated by criminals without any culpability, and he decided that he would make those criminals actually pay for the crimes since the police and judicial system constantly fail to]
7/1/2008 7:19:48 PM
these guys were pathetic scum and they got what they deserved.
7/1/2008 7:24:47 PM
7/1/2008 7:56:10 PM
ok, so I'm at sportclips getting a haircut, and unfortunately, i got stuck with a dude cutting my hair, but anyway, i'm all like, did you hear about joe horn killing those two burglars? has it been all over espn? (I still don't have cable since moving recently).he has no idea what i'm talking about, then decided that i have to be screwing with him.so i get home, and google it, and fuckdifferent joe horn.
7/1/2008 8:48:00 PM
7/1/2008 9:40:46 PM
7/1/2008 10:33:52 PM
7/1/2008 11:04:36 PM
Wow, this whole thing is just like an episode of King of the Hill. Takes place in Texas. The neighbor is Vietnamese ... I wonder if Joe Horn sold propane for a living, too ...Anyway, ... my feeling is that Joe Horn did act legally and shouldn't have been indicted. Do I think he acted ethically? Probably not. He had enough time to jabber on the phone about the castle doctrine to a dispatcher. He could've run off somewhere, which is what I think most reasonable people would've done in that situation. Even if there isn't a legal duty to retreat, you'd think he'd rather do that than shoot two people. I don't know about the rest of you, but my personal bar for gunning people down is pretty high -- and I don't think a 9/11 call is the appropriate time to blather about legal theories for doing so.Personally I don't think I like the castle doctrine in general. It's one thing to say that you can defend yourself within reason; to shoot someone solely in the name of defending property? Sounds barbaric to me. Is it therefore legal under this theory for one to set up various forms of deadly traps in their home to kill robbers in an automated way, whether you're at home or not? Maybe we should call it the Temple of Doom doctrine.Sure, the castle doctrine might have a deterring effect. I'm sure that cutting off people's hands in Muslim countries for stealing has a deterring effect too. We gotta have standards, folks.[Edited on July 2, 2008 at 4:38 AM. Reason : foo]
7/2/2008 4:36:12 AM
I am forced to admit that I have not read every post in this thread since last I posted. If you feel I have ignored a point you've made, please point it out and don't immediately jump to the conclusion that I did so intentionally.---I'm going to first respond to a whole slew of threads with a similar theme: that the fault inherently resides with the person committing the initial criminal offense (in this case, "stealing" or some legal variation on the term).It will sound cliche for me to say as much, because pretty much everyone with even a cursory understanding of the constitution already understands it, but I will say it anyway:The founding documents of this country do not give citizens the right to make this decision on their own. This isn't an issue of activist judges or liberal legislators. It's the fucking law, as derived from the United States Constitution and Bill of Rights. Moreover, the extent to which a person is or is not a criminal is left to judges and juries to decide.Yes, based on the information presented in this thread, it appears that the two deceased individuals were criminals. However, that determination is not left to individual citizens with guns. It is specifically delegated to judges and juries. Mr. Horn was neither, and even if he had been, the dead were afforded no legal representation whatsoever.It is, I feel, the right of every person on the planet to use lethal force and the threat thereof to prevent certain crimes against themselves or others. Murder, rape, even, perhaps, certain kinds of assault. But theft? Tell me, what object is worth a corpse? What amount of wealth is worth that stench? Certainly, incarcerate the thief. But smell a rotting human and tell me that any property you own merits that cost.Mr. Horn claims that he fired in self-defense, which is, of itself, a reasonable argument. But notwithstanding the lack of evidence that he was charged at, however briefly, we still have the reality of a man shooting another in the back. I'm willing to accept a certain lack of reaction time in the elderly, but the delay between a man rushing you and then turning tail and fleeing is beyond my leniency.---There are a number of other things I would like to say, but for the moment I think that the above covers the most important points. I assure you I will return to this thread tomorrow.
7/2/2008 4:52:46 AM
^^I think his mentioning of the "castle doctrine" with the operator occured after the shooting was said and done.[Edited on July 2, 2008 at 4:55 AM. Reason : ^^]
7/2/2008 4:53:23 AM
^Ummmm no. I read the transcript and the first thing he talks about is the new law. See: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/11/17/national/main3517564.shtml?source=mostpop_storyFirst lines:
7/2/2008 5:46:45 AM
7/2/2008 5:57:22 AM
It's ironic that one week after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the rape of a child doesn't merit the death penalty, many Americans are applauding a man not standing trial for the killing of two people who committed a petty robbery.
7/2/2008 10:53:21 AM
7/2/2008 10:58:20 AM
7/2/2008 11:00:57 AM
i understand that. but it is relevant to the topic at hand(your question has no answer -- how can you replace an irreplaceable item!?!@??)[Edited on July 2, 2008 at 11:04 AM. Reason : .]
7/2/2008 11:03:34 AM
so what do you do when a burglar steals a family heirloom and the cops dont give a shit? just say "oh well sucks for me"? some people arent content with being walked all over like that
7/2/2008 11:13:28 AM
in my experience with the rpd, they seemed to give a shit as much as i can imagine. they fingerprinted, took statements, talked to neighbors, all for a pretty cheap, replaceable stuff.not to mention, followed up a few days later with progress on the case (and some further questions)[Edited on July 2, 2008 at 11:16 AM. Reason : .]
7/2/2008 11:15:18 AM
well the last time i had a vehicle broken into, the cops didnt even come out for prints and i guarantee you they didnt do any followup...probably because they honestly dont care if someone steals your possessions...thats probably why so many people rob and steal, because they know the odds of not being caught are heavily in their favor]
7/2/2008 11:19:39 AM
So murder is the obvious answer?
7/2/2008 11:31:16 AM
Insurance replaces all that stuff.
7/2/2008 11:32:26 AM
^^no we should just let robbers run rampant and do whatever they want...I mean they just want your possessions or money, they don't want to take your life, or the life of a UNC student body president or anything like that^insurance replaces family heirlooms? how does that exactly work?]
7/2/2008 11:34:37 AM
They must not have been such an important heirloom that a common thug with a crowbar can enter your home and take it. Ever heard of a bank lock box? A fireproof safe?Like I said, you continue to narrow your position that eventually you'll have to add armed robbery, assault, and rape to the act to get anyone in here other than the most right leaning of folks to agree that vigilante murder is an acceptable behavior in this country. So why not just give up?
7/2/2008 11:41:42 AM