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  • Another good shoot..



    Melinda Herman, Mom Who Shot Intruder, Inspires Gun Control Foes

    LOGANVILLE, Ga. -- A Georgia mother who shot an intruder at her home has become a small part of the roaring gun control debate, with some firearms enthusiasts touting her as a textbook example of responsible gun ownership.

    Melinda Herman grabbed a handgun and hid in a crawl space with her two children when a man broke in last week and approached the family at their home northeast of Atlanta, police said. Herman called her husband on the phone, and with him reminding her of the lessons she recently learned at a shooting range, Herman opened fire, seriously wounding the burglary suspect.

    The National Rifle Association tweeted a link to a news story about the shooting, and support poured in from others online, hailing Herman as a hero. The local sheriff said he was proud of the way she handled the situation.

    "This lady decided that she wasn't going to be a victim, and I think everyone else looks at this and hopes they have the courage to do what she done," Walton County Sheriff Joe Chapman said Wednesday.
    Herman was working from home Friday when she saw a man walk up to the front door. She told police he rang the doorbell twice and then over and over again. He went back to his SUV, got something out and walked back toward the house, a police report said.

    Herman took her 9-year-old son and daughter into an upstairs bedroom and locked the door. They went into bathroom and she locked that door, too. She got her handgun from a safe, the report said, and hid with her children. At some point, she called her husband, who kept her on the line and called 911 on another line.

    In a 10-minute 911 recording released by the Walton County Sheriff's Office, Donnie Herman calmly explained what was happening to a dispatcher. His part of the conversation with his wife was also recorded.
    "Is he in the house, Melinda? Are you sure? How do you know? You can hear him in the house?" Donnie Herman said.
    His wife told him the intruder was coming closer.

    "He's in the bedroom? Shh, shh, relax. Just remember everything that I showed you, everything that I taught you, all right?" Donnie Herman told his wife, explaining later to the dispatcher that he had recently taken her to a gun range.

    It wasn't clear from the recording exactly when they went to range and Donnie Herman told The Associated Press on Wednesday the family didn't want to talk about the shooting.

    After Donnie Herman told his wife police were on the way, he started shouting: "She shot him. She's shootin' him. She's shootin' him. She's shootin' him. She's shootin' him."
    "OK," the dispatcher responded.

    "Shoot him again! Shoot him!" Donnie Herman yelled. He told the dispatcher he heard a lot of screaming, but he seems to get increasingly worried when he doesn't hear anything from his wife.

    Melinda Herman told police she started shooting the man when he opened the door to the crawl space. The man pleaded with her to stop, but she kept firing until she had emptied her rounds, she told police. She then fled to a neighbor's house with her children.

    The man drove away in his SUV. Police found the SUV on another subdivision street and discovered a man bleeding from his face and body in a nearby wooded area. Police identified the suspect as 32-year-old Paul Slater of Atlanta.

    Chapman said the hospital asked him not to comment on Slater's condition, but he said he is not certain Slater will survive. Authorities have a warrant but haven't formally arrested Slater yet. They plan to charge him with burglary, possession of tools for the commission of a crime and aggravated assault, Walton County sheriff's Capt. Greg Hall said.
    A phone number for Slater was not listed and it was not clear whether he has an attorney.

    Authorities believe Slater targeted a home in another local subdivision but left when confronted by the homeowner, Chapman said.

  • #2
    That guy isn't a very good burglar. Good for her, glad her family is safe.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by talisman View Post
      That guy isn't a very good burglar. Good for her, glad her family is safe.
      Being that he went after them in the crawl space, I don't think that a simple burgulary was on his mind, or he would have got the hell outta dodge. Another article I read says that he got shot something like 5 times, and still fled down the road, which tells me that he was likely on something.

      But yeah, good for her, just sucks that she and the kids will have to live with that haunting their thoughts. Having had our house broken into, it's the most violating feeling you can have next to an actual assualt, and I still to this day wonder where my Glock ended up, and if it's been using in other crimes since.

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      • #4
        Emptied a gun into him at damn near point blank range and he drove away? What the hell was she shoot him with, a .22?

        Either way, good on her.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Roscoe View Post
          Emptied a gun into him at damn near point blank range and he drove away? What the hell was she shoot him with, a .22?

          Either way, good on her.
          .38 I believe. The husband had just shown her how to shoot. Most people survive gunshot wounds anyways.
          IMG_0424

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          • #6
            I just heard the 911 call on the radio, everyone seemed calm. Said he was pleading for his life after the second shot, hope they dont try to charge her with anything.
            Originally posted by Marisa
            we women are all irrational and emotional and insane...some just hide it better than others.

            truth.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by GAP View Post
              .38 I believe. The husband had just shown her how to shoot. Most people survive gunshot wounds anyways.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by red89notch View Post
                I just heard the 911 call on the radio, everyone seemed calm. Said he was pleading for his life after the second shot, hope they dont try to charge her with anything.
                No way they would. It is easy to prove he is still a threat if he was able to drive away, granted he didn't get far, but he was still a threat.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by GAP View Post
                  .38 I believe. The husband had just shown her how to shoot. Most people survive gunshot wounds anyways.
                  This. Reason why shot placement is key followed by volume of fire.

                  They need to sue him for the bullets and new carpet.
                  Fuck you. We're going to Costco.

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                  • #10
                    i love a good story

                    sad he survived...hopefully he thinks twice next time

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by kbscobravert View Post
                      This. Reason why shot placement is key followed by volume of fire.

                      They need to sue him for the bullets and new carpet.
                      true
                      &
                      LOL

                      Comment

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