
Ruger GP100 .357 Magnum
Armed Citizens defend their homes. Armed Citizens defend their own lives, the lives of their family members, and sometimes people they don’t even know. Armed Citizens use their own guns to defend their homes, lives, and family members up to 2,000,000 times each year in the United States often without having to fire their gun. Below are true stories of Armed Citizens.
Shocked onlookers watched as a vehicle careened across a mall parking lot, nearly striking a tree. Inside, a man was savagely beating his girlfriend as she screamed for help. While others stood by and watched, a 27-year-old man with a concealed carry permit ran to the woman’s aid, drew a Glock semi-automatic pistol and shouted at her boyfriend to end the assault. The boyfriend saw the fun and promptly complied. Police praised the armed citizen’s actions. “For all we know, he could have saved her from serious injury,” said Police Captain Norman Colyer. “I’m going to call him and tell him that when he gets ready to renew his [concealed carry] licensed, it’s on me.” (News-Telegram, Sulphur Springs, Texas, 10/15/09)
Police say Peter Gilmore was enjoying a visit with his son, James McGlone, when two armed men with stockings over their faces kicked open the front door. One of the suspects held a knife to Gilmore’s throat and threatened to kill him. McGlone ran for the bedroom while the other suspect, armed with a tire iron, gave chase. The suspect may have assumed McGlone was running away, but he soon learned McGlone was arming himself. McGlone retrieved one of his father’s pistols, aimed it at his assailant and told him to leave. Instead, the suspect struck him with the tire iron. McGlone fired a single shot, wounding the suspect, who fled with his accomplice. (Herald Tribune, Sarasota, Fla., 10/26/09)
He may be only 13 years old, but police say two burglars proved no match for Josh Cichy. He had just arrived home to what should have been an unoccupied house, but something wasn’t right. “I walked down the hall and I saw two guys at the door and window,” Cichy explains. He took fast action, grabbing a powerful spotlight, an air pistol and a 20-ga. shotgun. First, he blinded the intruders with the spotlight and shot at them with the air gun, hitting one. “I think I got him right in the face,” Cichy recalls. Then he fired the shotgun and the intruders fled the home. Cichy says he’s familiar with firearms, thanks to his father. “I go hunting with my dad and friends, so I know what to do. I wasn’t really scared, but at the end I was shaking because of the adrenalin, I guess.” (Kalamazoo Gazette, Kalamazoo, Mich., 10/02/09)
A Georgia woman was at home with her daughter and a visitor when she heard a commotion in the front room. To her horror, two men and a woman wearing masks had barged in and started robbing the visitor. Rather than panic, the woman grabbed her gun, cell phone and daughter and hurried into a closet. Meanwhile, according to police, the robbers took $100 from the visitor, tied him up and began searching for the woman. They opened the closet, but took one look at her gun and ran. They were in such a hurry that they had trouble opening a door and fired a couple of shots in desperatin. The woman returned fire and the robbers fled the scene. (Associated Press, 10/19/09)
Three theives apparently weren’t aware of David Massey’s successful track record of repelling burglars from his rural home. Massey has had several burglary attempts at his home, including one in 2008 when he fired at one suspect and held another for police. In the latest incident, police say Massey discovered two women and a man breaking into his home and confronted them with a handgun. The suspects leapt into an SUV and hurtled toward Massey. “They drove right across the center of the [driveway] circle towards me … I was in fear of my life,” Massey said. “They wouldn’t stop, so I shot.” Massey fired six shots in the direction of the vehicle’s radiator. The vehicle veered out of control, missing Massey by mere feet and rolling onto its side. The suspects fled the vehicle and were arrested by police nearby. “I moved out here for the serenity,” said Massey, who’s determined to keep the home despite the burglaries. “I don’t know how serene it is today.” (Appeal-Democrat, Marysville, Calif., 09/29/09)
A Great-Grandmother and five of her relatives were enjoying a family trip when an armed robber stormed inside their motel room. Shouting orders, the robber forced the great-grandmother to the floor, which actually positioned her closer to her .357 magnum revolver, a gun she inherited from her late husband and for which she had a permit to carry. As the robber threatened three generations of the woman’s family and demanded money, she quietly got her gun. A shot rang out. “I thought I was shot,” her son said. “I didn’t realize my mother had shot him. It was mass chaos.” The robber stumbled outside and died. “She said to me, ‘God was with me tonight. You know I couldn’t have done that myself,” her son recalled. (The Columbus Dispatch, Columbus, Ohio 10/23/09)
Privately owned guns save lives. However, there are some people (Barack Obama) and organizations who don’t care about your ability to defend yourself and your loved ones. Stand up and assert your right to keep and bear arms or it may be lost. Help protect your rights by joining the NRA. The NRA fights to keep your right to keep and bear arms intact.
More True Stories Of Armed Citizens:
It Is Good News When Armed Citizens Defend Themselves
Still More Armed Citizens Defending Themselves And Others
The Continuing Tales Of Armed Citizens
True Stories Of Armed Citizens Defending Themselves
Elderly Woman In Maine Chases Away Armed Intruder
Real People Really Do Defend Themselves With Guns
A Public Service Message To Criminals – Stay Away From Texas
Armed Citizens