Posted on 02/21/2007 7:04:02 PM PST by Don Carlos
The gun was black. Or silver. Definitely big, though, and definitely a revolver.
And it was pointed right at Daniel Ray's head.
For the moment, that fact not the gun's color or a description of the gunman was all that registered in Ray's mind.
The whole thing didn't compute. One moment he'd been about to lock up Joe's Pawn and Bargain Center at 1825 NE 23 and go get some dinner at a Chinese buffet, and the next, the gunman and his two accomplices had burst inside, demanding money and threatening him and his coworkers.
For a few long minutes Monday, the robbers were in charge.
Then Ray's boss, Mike Wilbanks, opened fire from behind a two-way mirror. Two robbers were hit, and all three rushed out the door, leaving behind a heap of the pawn shop's jewelry and a trail of blood. Three suspects were later arrested on armed robbery complaints.
Robert Jamel Pennington, 17, of Oklahoma City was not shot. He made bail Tuesday and was released from the Oklahoma County jail.
Kentrell Smith, 16, of Oklahoma City was shot in an elbow and thigh. He remained in custody Wednesday.
Garrick Lee Thomas, 17, was shot twice in the back and a bullet grazed the back of his ear. He was also in jail Wednesday.
Turning the tables
A minute or two before 6 p.m. Monday, Ray moved out from behind the glass counter of the pawn shop and paused to talk to his two coworkers. Once the clock hit six, he planned to close up for the night.
Just before that happened, though, the gunman strolled in, holding the gun loosely at his side. At first, Ray, the store manager, thought the fellow wanted to pawn the weapon. He opened his mouth to say that the store doesn't deal in guns, but never had a chance to speak before the gun was aimed at his head.
Mike Wilbanks didn't know what was going on. Wilbanks, 39, owns the shop. He was sitting in his office behind a two-way mirror when the three robbers burst in, two of them smashing open a glass display counter and scooping up jewelry.
Absorbed in answering e-mails, Wilbanks didn't notice anything amiss. He didn't even hear the robbers shouting at his workers.
It wasn't until an employee rushed into the office, white-faced and breathless, that Wilbanks learned what was going on. He didn't really have to pause to think.
Wilbanks has never wanted to shoot anybody, but he's thought about it. A lot. He grew up around his father's pawn shops, which weren't usually in the best of neighborhoods. He can remember his dad hiding him behind a safe while a gunfight raged outside one of the family's stores, and he's always known that businesses like his sometimes attract criminals.
He learned to shoot a gun, getting good enough to shoot competitively. He took a self-defense course and received a conceal-carry permit. He prepared himself, as best he could, for the possibility that he might someday have to shoot someone.
So when he peered through the two-way mirror and saw Ray with a gun to his head, he pulled a Sig Sauer 9 mm semiautomatic out of his desk and drew a bead on the intruder, not realizing other robbers were inside the store.
"I got him in my sights, said Wilbanks, "but I didn't want to endanger anyone else. At some point, he started waving the gun around at other employees, telling them to give him the cash, and my manager backed way, way up, completely out of my line of fire.
"As soon as that happened, I had a clean shot on him, and I just started pulling the trigger.
Wilbanks' gun was loaded with special safety rounds designed to prevent stray bullets from penetrating walls or other hard surfaces and striking unintended targets. Wilbanks pulled the trigger four times, shattering the mirror and apparently striking the gunman, then fired four more times as the robbers fled.
One of his employees dove behind the counter as the shots were fired, pulled out a gun and fired more shots, Wilbanks said.
The robbers were gone.
Standing up
Pennington and Smith were arrested later that night after seeking treatment at a local hospital, police said. Thomas was picked up at an unknown location. At this point, said Oklahoma City police Sgt. Paco Balderrama, the shooting is considered justified, although that determination ultimately will be made by the Oklahoma County district attorney's office.
"Fearing for his employee's life, he (Wilbanks) began shooting, Balderrama said. "It's an open case. If someone else is in imminent danger, it would be justified.
For his part, Wilbanks is happy he stood up to the robbers and even happier he didn't kill anyone.
"There have been a lot of robberies in this area. ... I hope we sent a message that we're not going to tolerate that, he said.
I'm glad that turned out well. It's probably still worth taking the shot if an innocent employee gets shot, but it would sure ruin one's day.
Heres a ping for your ARMEDCITIZEN list.
yet another happy gun story. they put a warm glow in my heart
Robbing a pawn shop has got to one of the worst risk/reward calculations any aspiring career felon can make. The fact that it was Oklahoma only amplifies the risk side of the equation.
Dumb asses.
That area is a notoriously bad part of OKC, and probably every business there has been robbed at one time or another.
It's hard to believe the system allowed any of the punks to bail out.
Dumb asses is correct! There isn't a pawn shop in the state that the owner is not packing. These guys are lucky he didn't use a 12ga!
oww, a shotgun, much less forgiving. i wouldnt want to take that inside of a building.
Ranks right up there, just behind robbing a gun shop!LOL!
My guess is that the two who remained in custody were placed at the scene by the blood they left behind -- preliminary DNA tests are pretty quick and usually right. The one who got bail was the one who didn't get shot. Quite possibly the only evidence against him is one or both of the other thugs naming him as their accomplice. If so, there's no credible evidence that he was actually the third thug at the crime scene.
We actually had a gunshop robbery here some years back. The bad guy actually fired a shot, and left unharmed. He picked the right store. The one across town would have prolly had 15 clerks pullin and shootin!
Only thing I can think of that's stupider is the guy who tried to rob the bank around the corner from the local FBI office . . . on a 2nd Friday.
Oklahoma's "Make My Day" Law saves the day again! Tulsa's Mayor, Kathy Taylor, is in cahoots with New York Mayor Bloomberg, hoping to force gun control measures on the citizens of Tulsa. She is even searching for a new police chief who favors gun control. Let's hope she reads this article from Oklahoma City and learns the wisdom of those who crafted the Second Amendment. Citizens must maintain their rights to protect themselves.
Wonder what type of "safety" rounds?
maybe these:
http://www.dakotaammo.net/products/glaser/glaser.htm
Should have used a 12 gauge.
I heard a story once about a guy who got out of his car in front of a gun shop, leisurely put on a ski mask, and pulled a gun out. By the time he got into the shop every clerk had their gun out. Maybe he was trying to commit suicide?
Never underestimate the stupidity of the average thief...
:)
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