Posted on 09/29/2005 5:58:36 AM PDT by wagglebee
It was late when they got home, so late that the cluster of town houses at the top of the hill was dark.
Earlier this month, Fred Taylor, a Suffolk native and first-year law student at Mercer University, was returning from a fancy birthday dinner with his girlfriend to his home in Macon, Ga.
When the couple went inside, Taylor switched on the lights in the living room, the dining room and kitchen. Ceiling fans whirred.
Taylors girlfriend, Adrienne Warren, 22, went upstairs, changed clothes and settled downstairs on the couch in front of the TV. Taylor, also 22, was watching Law & Order, sitting in a chair across the room.
Warren, a senior at Christopher Newport University in Newport News, remembers that she dozed off for a while. The TV show was ending when she woke up around midnight.
Thats when Taylor heard something outside the dining room window, footsteps on the wooden deck.
Get upstairs, he told Warren. Somebodys outside.
She ignored him.
Instead, she walked across the room and peered out of the peep hole on the front door. The motion-detection floodlight at the front of the house erupted, but Warren said she couldnt see anybody.
She felt her boyfriend lay his hand on her shoulder. He told her to get away from the door and go upstairs.
By then, he had cut out all of the lights in the house, turned off the television and gone upstairs to retrieve his gun. Taylor, who graduated from Nansemond River High School and Old Dominion University, had gotten the gun, a .357 Magnum, after applying for a concealed weapons permit a year ago. He traveled a lot late at night for a civic organization, he said, and believes in the right to bear arms.
Taylor quickly pushed his girlfriend up the stairs and into the bedroom . He told her to lock the door. By that time, both of them could hear the screen being cut on the dining room window.
Taylor was still at the top of the stairs and Warren was on the phone to the police when they heard glass break, echoing through the three-level house with hardwood floors.
The alarm system blared like a siren, Taylor said.
Upstairs, a trembling Warren didnt know what was happening below.
Holding the handgun in both hands, Taylor started back down the stairs. At the second landing, he stopped, sat down and waited.
Edward Wayne Anderson, 42, had gotten out of jail the day before after serving time for pimping prostitutes, according to Macon police. On the night of Sept. 17, Anderson walked past the other dark houses on Taylors street.
He walked up onto the deck around the second floor of Taylors town house, popped the top off a Smirnoff Ice, left the top near one of the doors and eventually threw the bottle in the backyard, police said.
Before the glass broke, the couple heard Anderson painstakingly try each of three downstairs doors, rattling the knobs. He disarmed the houses automatic sprinkler system. Taylor said he might have thought it was the alarm.
Sitting on the landing, five steps above the dining room, Taylor saw Andersons hand, wrapped in a rag, reach through the broken window glass. He heard him ease the window up.
The darkness inside the house was dotted with several night lights Taylor liked to leave on. Anderson , who according to police had a string of convictions in the Macon area, stepped through the window and looked up the stairs, where his eyes met Taylors.
Taylor remembers thinking that there would be no negotiations.
Taylor fired his gun once, striking Anderson in the upper torso.
Anderson fell over, and Taylor ran back upstairs.
It took several seconds to persuade Warren to open the door. When he got inside the bedroom, he turned and locked the door again. The police were outside by then.
By the time police led Warren downstairs, a sheet had been hung to hide Andersons lifeless body.
Taylors family from Virginia arrived a week ago, after Warren had left from the Atlanta airport to go home.
The blood has been cleaned up by a service the police recommended.
The screen and window have been repaired, the sprinkler system reconnected and the alarm system checked.
Just a few days after the incident that made front-page headlines in Macon, police returned the .357 Magnum to Taylor.
He will not be charged in the incident, said Howard Simms , district attorney for the Macon Judicial Circuit. Georgia law is similar to Virginias, he said. If somebody makes a forcible entry into your home, you are entitled to defend yourself.
There is no doubt about what happened, Simms said. You can hear the window glass breaking on the 911 tape.
When Warren returned to school on Tuesday, her Shakespeare class was studying Richard III, a monstrous villain who, in Shakespeares play, killed everybody who got in his way.
She said her professor turned to her and asked if she thought Richard got what he deserved.
Good riddance to bad rubbish, she remembers saying.
And she cried, ending up in a counselors office for several hours. For her, she said, the experience will never be over.
Looking back, Taylor said he believes that Anderson thought Warren was in the house alone. He thinks Anderson may have peeped through the crack at the side of the blinds on the window and seen Warren on the couch.
I regret being put in the position I was put in, Taylor said. I regret having to take a human life.
But under the same circumstances, he said, hed do it again.
good point! thanks
Want to add this to your list
Good points. Somebody breaks into your house, you terminate with extreme prejudice, period.
what to think.... should he have yelled "I have a gun" and ran the burglar off?
You're assuming the perp was a just a 'burglar'.
Going back to the article: Warren was on the phone to the police when they heard glass break, echoing through the three-level house with hardwood floors. The alarm system blared like a siren, Taylor said.
I'm assuming that 'burglars' would hightail it when an alarm system started blaring.
The way I read it was that the POS knew the girlfriend was home. The POS was a pimp. The girl was probably going to be raped.
"Nansemond River High School"
saw this clause and thought "what a school".. Nanosecond High School - that's a place to get quick draw skills!
But then I looked again. Great thought though!
Wow, this criminal learned some facts the hard way, huh? Lets count....
1) Drinking clouds judgement
2) Motion detectors do work
3) Alarm systems in homes are NOT your friend
4) Armed inhabitants of the house you are robbing MAY kill you
Hmm, too bad this one will not get another chance.
If not for that .357, this might have been a story of a brutal rape and double murder. And, to many loony libs, that would be a preferable outcome.
Good news stories like these start my day off well.
10 points for center mass shot on the bad guy.
If the person is inside your house you cannot shoot them unless they are attacking you. You are obligated to retreat, leave your home if you are able.
If you catch them breaking in, in the process of entering your home then, if you feel your life or well being is threatened, you can knock them dead.
I hope one day we can get this changed similar to what has been done in Fla.
"He disarmed the houses automatic sprinkler system. Taylor said he might have thought it was the alarm" --- hahahaha, my very favorite sentence in all of this. Next to the part about the white sheet. Second Amendment rules.
Add to that the fact that if the perp was ever then caught, the libs would declare him innocent due to a "bad" childhood and prison influence, then Jesse Jackson "et al" would be at his side for marches and demonstrations, and after a sham court trial (ala oj), he would be freed to cry openly on the courthouse steps surrounded by his "dream team", then the libs would have him run for mayor of the newly re-built New Orleans to replace Saint Nagin who would have retired on a $250,000 a year pension!
So...that little .357 bullet saved us much more than just a simple rape and double murder!
It sounds like the only way to make this work is to never leave the house! LOL!
Also a good reason to get a dog. Especially you single ladies. A cat would have hit under the bed, while a dog would have been barking their heads off as soon as the perp went onto the back deck.
You and I are both safer for what he did.
The way I read it was that the POS knew the girlfriend was home. The POS was a pimp. The girl was probably going to be raped.
I got that too. And I thought that it would be worse than rape. As in, raped, beaten, bludgeoned & left for dead. Ignoring the alarm/ alarms (motion detector lights) was a clear indication to me that the intruder was in a very aggressive drugged/ drunken condition and/or something worse. Being a convicted pimp is an indication that it was 'something worse', IMO.
Because it happened at night, it would have been legal in Texas to shoot the intruder before he broke into the house.
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Agreed. I have three, 82lbs., 85lbs. and 100 lbs. And a S&W 686 .357 magnum revolver.
I'm not single, but that doesn't always make a difference to a rapist.
I think in most other states you need to have the presence of mind to drag them inside after you are done. (wink)
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