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Homeowner Kills Teen Burglary Suspect(TX)
myfoxdfw.com ^ | 26 May, 2011 | Brandon Todd

Posted on 05/27/2011 5:58:20 AM PDT by marktwain

FORT WORTH, Texas - A Fort Worth teenager is dead after police said he tried to break into a house and was shot.

The incident happened at about noon on Wednesday in the 1100 block of East Jefferson Avenue.

The homeowner said shortly after he returned home from work he heard a noise at his back window.

The man said he pulled back the blinds and saw a young man with a crow bar trying to pry the window open.

“He was coming in the house. He scared me. I didn’t know what else to do,” he said. “I put the clip in the gun and I clicked it thinking that he heard all that.”

But that didn’t work, he said.

“When I raised the blinds he was still there, like he was still coming in. He was almost in then. I didn’t know what else to do,” the man said. “When I raised the blinds up I shot him.”

Police believe that’s when 17-year-old Ernest Morris turned around and jumped over the fence. But he didn’t make it far. He died behind the house from a bullet wound to the chest.

Jacqueline Morris doesn’t believe her son had to die. She wants justice for him.

“He was a wonderful son and I’m gonna miss him,” she said.

Morris said her son played football for Meadowbrook Middle School and Eastern Hills High School. But he seemed to be getting in trouble more often and ended up in an alternative school.

“They said he got a ticket and go to court messin’ up, havin’ fights at school. That’s the normal thing childs do. But other than that he was a good person,” she said.

She wants answers as to why the homeowner didn’t do more to scare him away. She believes her son may have known the man’s daughter.

“I think it was the girl. To visit somebody, I think,” she said. “Some people like my sister, if I don’t answer the door my sister and them go and knock on my window.”

Tarrant County District Attorney Joe Shannon said in Texas homeowners have the right to use deadly force if there is reasonable fear of death or serious bodily injury. Self defense laws are complex, and it’s usually left up to a grand jury to decide what’s right and wrong.

At this point the homeowner has not been arrested.

He said the incident sadly changed his life and the lives of the teenager’s family.

“A lot of people say, you know, you’re protecting this. You’re protecting your property. But to take somebody’s life, I gotta live with that for the rest of my life and I know his family has to live with it,” he said.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: badmother; banglist; defense; notmykid; poorparenting; turninglifearound; txhome
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To: marktwain
Jacqueline Morris doesn’t believe her son had to die. She wants justice for him.

“He was a wonderful son and I’m gonna miss him,” she said.

I am beginning to believe that, under certain circumstances, we need to bring the parents of young felons and lock them up, too. I suspect the cops could make a good case for arresting Jacqueline Morris for "receiving stolen goods" or something similar.
41 posted on 05/27/2011 7:24:12 AM PDT by Little Ray (The Gods of the Copybook Heading, with terror and slaughter return!)
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To: Shimmer1
He WAS a good boy! (except for when he was not)

Sounds like what Aunt Mary used to say about Uncle Bob: "When he wasn't drinking he was the soberest guy around!"

42 posted on 05/27/2011 7:30:59 AM PDT by Mr Ramsbotham (Laws against sodomy are honored in the breech.)
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To: super7man
“They said he got a ticket and go to court messin’ up, havin’ fights at school. That’s the normal thing childs do.

And there we see the deep psychopathology not only of the late unalamented perp and his ever lovin' mama, but of the entire "culture" they live in. For them, childhood criminality is "normal". NOTHING good will come of that.

43 posted on 05/27/2011 7:31:36 AM PDT by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: PATRIOT1876
And glass mugs.
And large rocks.
And small rocks.
And pointed sticks.
And twigs.
And plush toys.
And choking hazard toys.
And Legos.

DONT FORGET ABOUT BANANAS!

44 posted on 05/27/2011 7:35:02 AM PDT by DCBryan1 (FORGET the lawyers...first kill the "journalists". (Die Ritter der Kokosnuss))
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To: DCBryan1

What about pointed sticks?


45 posted on 05/27/2011 7:36:40 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator
What about pointed sticks?

"POINTED STICK!? Oh, oh, oh. We want to learn how to defend ourselves against pointed sticks, do we? Getting all high and mighty, eh? Fresh fruit not good enough for you eh? Well I'll tell you something my lad.

When you're walking home tonight and some great homicidal maniac comes after you with a bunch of loganberries, don't come crying to me! Now, the passion fruit. When your assailant lunges at you with a passion fruit..."

46 posted on 05/27/2011 7:42:34 AM PDT by DCBryan1 (FORGET the lawyers...first kill the "journalists". (Die Ritter der Kokosnuss))
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To: DCBryan1

What if he’s got a bunch?


47 posted on 05/27/2011 7:43:25 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: PATRIOT1876

“And Legos.”

[Sputtersputter] You go too far, sirrah! HarrUMPH!
:-)

Colonel, USAFR


48 posted on 05/27/2011 7:49:32 AM PDT by jagusafr ("We hold these truths to be self-evident...")
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To: marktwain
“They said he got a ticket and go to court messin’ up, havin’ fights at school. That’s the normal thing childs do. But other than that he was a good person,” ,(his mother says)

Seems far from normal to me, unless this mother thinks that it is okay to break in to homes? Giving her son a pass for his behavior throughout his life, helped bring this on.

49 posted on 05/27/2011 7:50:35 AM PDT by rawhide
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To: dfwgator

Shut up!

Right now you, Mr Apricot. Come at me with the banana!

50 posted on 05/27/2011 7:56:55 AM PDT by DCBryan1 (FORGET the lawyers...first kill the "journalists". (Die Ritter der Kokosnuss))
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To: marktwain

Good thing it wasn’t a SWAT Team member raiding the wrong house or the homeowner would be dead with 60 bullets in him.


51 posted on 05/27/2011 8:00:48 AM PDT by Republic of Texas (Socialism Always Fails)
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To: jagusafr
• *“And Legos.”
[Sputtersputter] You go too far, sirrah! HarrUMPH!*

Certainly, I understand your position as a gentleman. I myself wrote a paper in first grade extolling the virtues of Legos (as they were my favorite toy). My teacher called my mother and requested that she buy me some Legos!

However, if you’ve ever accidentally stepped on one in your bare or stocking feet in the night, surely you can see the danger!
;-)

52 posted on 05/27/2011 9:21:44 AM PDT by PATRIOT1876 (The only crimes that are 100% preventable are crimes committed by illegal aliens)
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To: DCBryan1

*DONT FORGET ABOUT BANANAS!*

Don’t come gasping to me when you have a pineapple down your windpipe!


53 posted on 05/27/2011 9:24:22 AM PDT by PATRIOT1876 (The only crimes that are 100% preventable are crimes committed by illegal aliens)
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To: PATRIOT1876

LOL - come to think of it, a liberal sprinkling of Legos beneath the sill of every window in the house would probably do as well as concertina wire!


54 posted on 05/27/2011 9:44:41 AM PDT by jagusafr ("We hold these truths to be self-evident...")
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To: marktwain

Jacqueline Morris doesn’t believe her son had to die. She wants justice for him.

“He was a wonderful son and I’m gonna miss him,” she said.


Well lady! He was not WONDERFUL and the community sure as hell ain’t gonna miss him.

Good shot...saved the taxpayers money and prevented even more crime in the future.


55 posted on 05/27/2011 10:00:51 AM PDT by DH (Once the tainted finger of government touches anything the rot begins)
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To: marktwain

Jacqueline Morris doesn’t believe her son had to die. She wants justice for him.

“He was a wonderful son and I’m gonna miss him,” she said.

He got justice...and he must have been giving Mama his loot.


56 posted on 05/27/2011 10:36:35 AM PDT by TASMANIANRED (We kneel to no prince but the Prince of Peace)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

E. Pluribus Unum -=> “I am convinced that the reason blacks want gun control is so that their kids won’t get killed while committing crimes.”

Took a little digging, but I finally found it: Had to go back YEARS, but here’s a John Ross (author of Unintended Consequences) column that addresses your comment. From way back in the archive: http://web.archive.org/web/20070706054607/http://www.john-ross.net/race&rtc.htm

It directly addresses your comment 1/2 to 2/3 of the way down, bur RTWT


57 posted on 05/27/2011 10:38:41 AM PDT by Peet (Leftists think personal liberty is so important it must be carefully rationed.)
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To: Peet
Nice article. A Henry Bowman tip of the that to you.

Posting it here for future reference.


Race, Values, the O.J. Verdict, and Right-To-Carry, or
A Statistician Explains a Conundrum

By John Ross

Copyright 2003 by John Ross.  Electronic reproduction of this article freely permitted provided it is reproduced in its entirety with attribution given.

    I had another column ginned up for this week’s offering but then I read something an hour ago which made me save it for a later date and address something else that’s been on my mind, namely blacks and Right-To-Carry laws. Some background:

    Those of you who are regular readers of Ross in Range may notice a similarity in layout and scheduling (but not necessarily content) to another, much more widely read Internet column called Fred On Everything at http://www.fredoneverything.net/ColMenu.html by Fred Reed.

    This is not a coincidence. I have been a regular reader of Mr. Reed’s writings for a number of years, from back when he started working for my friend Bob Brown at Soldier of Fortune. Mr. Reed is twelve years older than I, a Marine and decorated Vietnam combat vet, and worked as a police beat columnist for the Washington Times for several years. As such, he has experience in areas I do not, though we’ve both spent a lot of time in the Third World’s more interesting backwaters, often with a girl or a gun in our hands. (Couldn’t resist that one. I think Mickey Spillane takes control of my keyboard sometimes.) Fred is now an expatriate living in Mexico and spends his time writing, scuba diving, hanging out in bars, flirting with women, and apparently doing exactly what he wants.

    I like Fred’s weekly columns, and while some (like #199) try to be too cute for my taste, others are absolute knockouts. The latter variety often deal with issues of race and education—the so-called "melting pot" of whites, blacks, Hispanics, and Asians in America, and how much (if any) each of these groups is indeed melting.

    Fred’s background, especially his years in D.C., gives him the right to speak with firsthand authority on matters I usually avoid: race relations in general and what most people (privately) think of as The Black Problem in particular.

    My avoidance is not from cowardice but out of an innate belief that a person who (starting at age three) enjoyed attendance at the best private schools he could get into has not the credentials to be lecturing on matters of sociology and the underclass.

    In that light, when Fred writes about blacks and education, given his experience in D.C., I read very carefully. He’s hit some home runs on this subject before, but I thought his 200th column "Whiteness Studies" was an especially long ball, as was #180 "What’s a White Guy to Do?"    (Side note: If you are a regular reader of Fred’s column, be aware that his view of the black/white state of affairs in America is more bleak than my own. I am willing to concede that might be due to Fred having more accurate information, however.)

    Central to Fred’s commentary is that in D.C., blacks run the whole political and educational system, they have plenty of school funding, and the teachers are paid far more than the national average. The results are terrible. What to do? Neither he nor I have any idea.

    At the risk of being accused of blaming blacks for all their own problems, it strikes me that as long as so many blacks have such different value systems from their white counterparts, we will never see the generally easy coexistence that whites enjoy with Asians and, to a somewhat lesser degree, Hispanics.

    Never was this brought home so dramatically for me as at the O.J. Simpson trial. I am not talking about the fact that a largely black jury reached a verdict of Not Guilty in the murder of two whites. This has happened many times in our history on the other side of the racial aisle. I am referring to what one columnist* called "the absolutely breathtaking reaction" of America’s entire black population when the verdict was announced. Across the country, Black America was positively jubilant.

    When white Americans see film footage of some pus-gut like Bull Connor and his thugs using fire hoses and billy clubs on peaceful black freedom marchers, the near-universal reaction is revulsion. The same is true of lynchings.

    It is true that over the years there have been cases where an all-white jury has ignored the evidence and freed a white man for a vicious crime because his victim was black, but White America as a whole has never, in my memory, cheered such events. I would like you to engage in a little exercise here with me. I would like you to envision the O.J. Simpson case, with the races reversed.

    Imagine a white Hall of Fame footballer turned actor/pitchman, like Howie Long.  Imagine Howie had a moderately hot-looking black ex-wife with a high school education and breast implants. (To my knowledge Mr. Long is not so encumbered, but bear with me.)

    Imagine that there was overwhelming DNA and other evidence that Howie had butchered this black ex-wife and a black male acquaintance of hers. Imagine the entire Howie Long Trial being televised for months, and being called the "Trial of the Century."  Imagine Greta Van Susteren's TV career being "made" by her televised legal commentary on The Howie Long Trial.   Imagine that during The Howie Long Trial there is the revelation that one of the black cops involved with Howie’s arrest disliked whites and had used the terms "white devil" and "honky" in the past.  Imagine the defense team running with this and arguing that all the city's black officers tampered with evidence and engaged in a huge conspiracy to frame Howie for the two murders.  Finally, imagine a largely white jury telling us they had weighed the evidence and decided Howie was Not Guilty.

    Can you, in your most reckless imaginings, see White America having a mass celebration over this Not Guilty verdict, and repeating the mantra The black bitch (and her friend, presumably) deserved it? I can’t. Not at all.  Similarly, can you imagine whites all across America being particularly upset at the possibility that Howie might get sent to Death Row for murdering two black people?  The concept is ludicrous.

    And yet whites in America have come to expect this very sort of thing of blacks.  We expect blacks to set fire to their own neighborhoods and loot the black-owned businesses therein when a jury verdict in a racially-charged case displeases them.  And they do.

    Which brings me to the Right-To-Carry issue. Missouri is unfortunately one of the five remaining states which absolutely prohibit honest adults from carrying a concealed firearm for protection. There is no permit available here under any circumstances. The legislature passed Right-To-Carry last month, but it is not yet law, and there is fear that our Governor may veto the measure, although I believe there are enough votes for a veto override.  (7/3/03 update: Gov. Holden just vetoed RTC in a big ceremony this afternoon in St. Louis County. 9/11/03 Update: The Missouri House and Senate just overrode Governor Holden's veto of RTC.  Missourians just got some of their rights back, after 129 years.)  I wrote an article for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on this issue, but they want you to pay $2.95 to read it online. I'll put my article up on my site when I get the text loaded.

    When discussing this matter, people inevitably bring up Missouri’s 1999 ballot referendum on Right-To-Carry, which was narrowly defeated (with a dismal 30% voter turnout, I might add.) The fact is that the measure passed in almost every county in the state. The defeat came from the fact that two very large urban precincts in St. Louis and Kansas City were over 90% opposed. At the time, I thought this was vote fraud (and to be honest, I still think that was a factor). Ninety percent? You can’t get ninety percent agreement on anything.

    A black businessman (who was one of the handful of St. Louis city residents who voted for the referendum) and I were discussing the recent passage of RTC. I brought up the referendum results, and said I could not understand why blacks had been so uniformly against the measure. The proposal was a "shall issue" one, where if you satisfied the requirements (training, fingerprints, no criminal record, no mental illness, etc.) you couldn’t be denied the permit just because the sheriff didn’t like the idea of people besides the police having guns. The businessman stared at me.

    "I thought you were good at math," he said.  I allowed as to how I felt that I was. "Then you must never have taken Statistics and Probability." I told him I had done this also, and that it had been one of the most rewarding math classes I had ever taken (and incidentally was taught by Amherst’s professor Denton, who is black.) "Then you must be cowed enough by political correctness to never think of applying statistics and probability to anything involving race." Finally I admitted that this last accusation might be true.

    "Then I am going to ask you two true-or-false questions. One: Do blacks in the city of St. Louis have large extended families?" I answered in the affirmative. "Two: Is it true that in St. Louis, over 40% of the black males between the ages of 17 and 25 have criminal records?" I told him that was also true, unfortunately.

    "So here is the important question: What are the chances of a black person of voting age in St. Louis having at least one relative with a criminal record? Assume we define ‘relative’ broadly, to include the young men who father the children of our female relatives, whether married to them or not." He sat there waiting for my answer.

    "Are we talking fathers, stepfathers, uncles, brothers, stepbrothers, male cousins, sons, stepsons, nephews, mothers’ boyfriends, aunts' boyfriends, sisters’ boyfriends, daughters’ boyfriends, stepdaughters’ boyfriends, female cousins’ boyfriends, nieces’ boyfriends, as well as anyone actually married to a female relative?" I asked. He nodded. "Then I’d say there's nearly 100% probability that at least one relative would have a criminal record." He smiled at me like a teacher who has just gotten the right answer from one of his slower students.

    "So," I said, "I'm to believe that the black sentiment in St. Louis was ‘I wish young Tyrone would stop robbing people, but I don’t want one of the people he robs to shoot him dead.’ Is that it?" I asked.

    "You’ve got it exactly," he told me.

    "But why? I mean, honestly, if some guy was married to my cousin and mugged people for a living, I’d figure he was making his own choices and could damn well take the chance of being blasted. I wouldn’t vote away my rights to help his sorry ass."

    "What if it wasn’t just your one cousin’s husband, but 40% of all your male relatives between the ages of 18 and 25? What if that was, oh, I don’t know, a dozen people?"  Suddenly I didn’t know what to say.

    "You don’t feel that way," I said finally.

    "I’m an Uncle Tom. I’ve recently come to realize that I now have very few black friends."

    This statement filled me with an ineffable sadness.  I know that we will get Right-To-Carry here in Missouri, even if the Governor vetoes it. That’s not the issue. And every black Missourian with a criminal record isn’t going to get shot by an armed citizen—we all know that, too.   In over 98%** of the cases where a licenseholder encounters a criminal, he stops the crime without firing a shot. It’s that way in Atlanta and every other big city with a large black population in a Right-To-Carry state, so there’s no reason to think it would be any different in Kansas City or St. Louis.

    But the O.J. trial and what the black businessman said has stuck with me. What hope can we have, I wonder, if the values that blacks hold dear are mutually exclusive of those held by whites?

                                                                                                                    John Ross 6/23/03

58 posted on 05/27/2011 11:32:36 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (If Sarah Palin really was unelectable, state-run media would be begging the GOP to nominate her.)
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