Depends was he already dead from the head shot or was the head shot a mortal wound.
You can't kill someone who is already dead.
I believe the ME said that the body shots were the fatal wounds.
Depends was he already dead from the head shot or was the head shot a mortal wound.
You can't kill someone who is already dead.
WOW
The first shot was self defense, but the rest weren't.
The man appears to be calm when he returns. He didn't run to get the second gun. Heck he didn't he run over to where the boy was. He walks calmly the whole time, bends over and fires. Then calmly walks over to the phone.![]()
In FL, the second person would be charged with murder - if a death occurs during a felony - the people committing the original crime are charged. I wish more states would do the same thing.
Funny about the calls for a change of venue (even on the DIS boards) - usually those are called for when a person has a greater chance of being found guilty.
I think it would be hard to convict for murder - if the law says a shooting would be justified if a person felt in fear for his life - who can say what the pharmacist felt?
I'm letting my closet conservative out:
If you're going to walk into an establishment with the intent to rob it, you'd better be prepared to pay with your life. Period.
If I were on the jury I would not convict the pharmacist. That young man (teenaged or not) entered the pharmacy with, at minimum, an intent to steal and, at maximum, an attempt to shoot, maim or kill the innocent people working in that pharmacy. They didn't invite him in. He just decided to take what wasn't his.
Regardless of whether the pharmacist killed him with the first bullet or the sixth, the profit for robbery with a deadly weapon was (and should be) immediate death if the victim of the robbery has the means to exact it.
The pharacist was justified in doing what he did.
self defense. I'd image this poor man was scared out of his mind. My guess is he saw that teen move and was afraid he would get up and come after him. When you are scared for your life you never know how you m ight act
Depends was he already dead from the head shot or was the head shot a mortal wound.
You can't kill someone who is already dead.
Being upset does not justify a lack of judgement.
I agree, not only that, but there have been cases of the intruder coming back and suing the person that was robbed. I have always been told, if you have to use a gun, be sure and finish the job.
Even if the intruder didn't win a court case, you would still have to go through paying for your defense.

merekc said:The thing that no one has mentioned that I think is a huge factor is that many people that rob pharmacies are not doing it for money they are doing it for drugs.
I worked in a pharmacy for about a dozen years. It was held up once, yes, for drugs. Generally, the pharmacy counter - and so, the drugs - are at the back of the store. NOT an easy escape or common-sense location from which to rob. You want to get in and out as quickly as possible.
; and the other time when I was held up at knifepoint, in a "nice" neighborhood.Um, he had two employees still in the store? I don't know - I won't download that program needed to view videos (yes, I do need a new computerdeclansdad said:You could make a case for the first shoot to be justified but not the remaining shots. This man deserves to be convicted for what he did. If he felt he was still in danger, why would he re-enter the store?
) so I don't know if his coworkers were inside or outside the store at that point. Did he know?In FL, the second person would be charged with murder - if a death occurs during a felony - the people committing the original crime are charged. I wish more states would do the same thing.
Funny about the calls for a change of venue (even on the DIS boards) - usually those are called for when a person has a greater chance of being found guilty.
I think it would be hard to convict for murder - if the law says a shooting would be justified if a person felt in fear for his life - who can say what the pharmacist felt?
The pharmacist will never be convicted of murder, no matter where they hold the trial. The kid got what he deserved. He came into the pharmacy threatening death or bodily harm to the people working there. He should have been prepared to die. I feel sorry for the pharmacist, who is a disabled Army veteran of the Gulf War. I think the pharmacist should get a medal for ridding the earth of another scum bag robber. In an interview the day this happened, the pharmacist said a bullet flew right past his head, barely missing him, before he fired the first shot. Too bad he didn't kill both robbers, AND the 31 year old ex con driving the get away car, and also the fourth scum bag adult who talked the kids into committing the crime. No doubt they'll be back to their criminal ways as soon as they are released from prison the NEXT time, just like the last time they got out.
I believe everything that happened prior to the victim leaving the store was justified. What occurred when he returned was not.
I don't think the boy deserved to be killed.

The pharmacist was probably in a state of shock,having been in fear for his life, then having just shot someone for the first time in his life, and having seen the blood & experienced the robbery etc. There is no way that pharmacist is guilty of murder.
After my break in, I was certain the guy was still coming to get me even hours after it happened. I was not in a normal state of mind. I didnt even feel safe with the police there. However irrational that may seem, in my mind I was CERTAIN he was still coming to get me that night, and I was terrified. I felt that way for months. Im still jumpy, years later.
That sort of fright def puts you into a survival mode. Its 100% unfair to say the pharmacist was "calm and rational" when he went to get that gun and shoot the kid. There is no way he was calm and rational after that. Its ridiculous even to say it. He was still not in his right mind. Im certain the jury will not convict him of murder.
Its so easy for people to judge and say what they would have done. I hope you never have the chance to see for yourself.
This is what it boils down to in my opinion. I can guarantee you that if I had been in this man's shoes and thought there was one chance in a MILLION that the robber could have been playing possum, come to and pulled out another gun and shot at me......I'd have shot 100 bullets into him if I had access to them. Rational? Maybe not. But it's the way I am. If my mind perceives an "It's either me or them" situation, I can promise you, it will be ME that makes it out in one piece if I have anything to say about it. And having access to a gun and bullets means I have something to say about it.
Yes, the odds are that if I've already shot a robber in the head and he's laying there on the floor, he's PROBABLY not a threat to me. But that is not a CERTAINTY. And my chicken, panic-stricken, survivial of the fittest self would go to any lengths to make sure I was certain.....DEAD certain.....he was ZERO threat to me.
I have always said that if someone breaks in our house, I want the gun instead of my DH. He will THINK too long and hard. I'll just shoot them dead. If they break in my house, they are up to no good. So was the "kid" in question in this instance. What we DO know is that the pharmacist lived to tell the tale.
and if you left the house, returned, got another gun, and shot the robber another six times, you should be tried and convicted as well. If the robber broke in and you shoot him 6 times in a row, that a bit different.
I haven't read all the facts.