Armed Citizens- Schools
Courtesy of the National Rifle Association's "Armed
Citizen" archives.
Note that these represent only a sample of incidents.
These are drawn from cases printed in the American Rifleman, limited by
space to about a dozen cases each month from all over the country.
You can search for any state or key word at the NRA-ILA
"Armed Citizen" file
The Herald-Journal, Spartanburg, SC, 3/15/88
Eleven-year-old Todd Knight of Switzer, S.C., was home alone after
school for the first time when two "rough looking" men broke in through
a window. Realizing he had no way to escape, Knight loaded his .22 rifle,
a Christmas gift, and when the two intruders spotted him as they were ransacking
the house, the boy opened fire, killing both burglars. The county sheriff's
department, calling the shootings justifiable, said both men had records.
The Tribune, Chicago, IL, 2/17/87
When Russell Dooley heard glass breaking at a side window of his Chicago,
Ill., home, he told his wife to call police. The school teacher then got
his recently purchased .38 revolver and went outside to investigate. A
teen lunged at Dooley with a tree branch, and the resident shot and killed
his attacker and wounded an accomplice. A wounded suspect was charged with
burglary in a juvenile petition. Dooley was not charged.
The Gazette-Journal, Reno, NV, 3/6/86
Laura and Scott Williams, two Sparks, Nev., teenagers, returned home
from school to find a stranger ransacking their house. When the intruder
reached for his back pocket, Scott grabbed a pistol he kept in his room
and held the burglar until police arrived.
The Journal-Scene, Summerville, SC, 2/27/85
When Ridgeville, S.C., resident Vance Varner walked into his backyard,
he was accosted by a masked man carrying a shotgun. Varner pulled a pistol,
fired and the man fled. Police said the culprit was also suspected of burglarizing
a nearby school.
The News, Birmingham, AL, 7/10/81
When a neighbor called to tell him that a gang of young thieves was
stealing gas from school buses near his Tarrant, Ala., home, Bill Arnold
didn't think about his heart condition. He grabbed a .45 cal. pistol and
ran to the bus lot, where he apprehended the five thieves. A school board
representative praised Arnold, saying, "it's one thing to call the police,
it's another to actually apprehend the people in the middle of the night
to save community property."
The Tribune, San Gabriel Valley, CA, 3/11/81
A trio of young burglars had gotten past Charles Noll's watchdog by
feeding him cookies and were ransacking his West Covina, Calif., home when
the NRA member returned one morning. Noll grabbed a .357 and collared the
three, all truants from a nearby high school. Noll, a hunter safety instructor,
says he favors a shotgun for home defense--"you rack a round into that
chamber, and I guarantee the next sound you'll hear is that burglar running
out of your house."
The News-Press, Ft. Myers, FL, 5/10/79
Volusia County, Fla., judge, Darrel Carnell doesn't mess around. When
the defendent in a recent battery case disrupted his own trial by shouting
and, finally, rushing at the judge, Carnell produced a small-caliber pistol
from beneath his robes and ordered the man to return to his seat. The defendant
did as he was told, but remained so violent that he had to be gagged and,
in the end, removed from the courtroom. The judge defended his policy of
carrying a gun in court, citing both state law and the opinions of several
attorney generals. A high school counselor, accompanying 14 students on
a visit to the court, did, too. "If I was a judge, I'd carry [a gun] too,"
she said.
The Press, Riverside, CA
Two housebreakers were trying to enter the Riverside, Calif., home
of Edwin "Pop" Gardner, an 88-year-old retired doctor and school board
member. The pair chased Gardner and his wife into their bedroom and tried
to break down the door after the elderly couple barricaded themselves in.
Finally Gardner opened fire with a shotgun, severely wounding one of the
thugs.
The Dominion Post, Morgantown, WV
Retired school teacher Marjorie DeGarmo awoke to find a man with a
rifle in the bedroom of her Wadestown, W. Va., house. She scuffled with
the stranger and managed to get her pistol from the night stand. The pistol
discharged, killing the man. The shooting was later ruled "justifiable
homicide by reason of self-defense" by the local prosecuting attorney.
The Arizona Republic, Phoenix, AZ
High school rifle team captain Vicki Van Male was at her after-school
job in a Denver, Colo., doughnut shop when an armed man entered the store,
emptied the register and ordered her to follow him outside. She did as
told, but while walking managed to grab the robber's gun and wound him.
Seattle Post Intelligencer, Seattle, WA
Samuel S. Cameron, associate principal of the Garfield High School
in Garfield, Wash., spotted a youth who had caused a disturbance on the
campus. When Cameron asked the youth to leave, the latter pulled what appeared
to be a gun. Grabbing his own pistol, Cameron fired into the ground, causing
the troublemaker to flee.
The Cleveland Banner, Cleveland, TN
James D. Moore, a Bryant, Tenn., high-school senior, got his gun from
his home when he saw gunmen robbing a local post office. As the bandits
fled by car, Moore put a shot into one of the car's taillights which enabled
police and postal inspectors to identify the car later. For this, he was
awarded $1,500 by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.
Daily News, Anchorage, AK
An Anchorage, Alaska, man heard someone breaking into a school next
door at 3 a.m. While his wife called police, the man got a gun and stopped
the burglar.
Star, Washington, DC
Four youths bent on vandalizing the cafeteria of St. Francis Xavier
School and Convent in Baltimore late in May broke a basement window and
fled when surprised by 2 nuns. When the boys stopped to watch their pursuers,
Sister Thomasine, the Superior, fired a pistol shot into the air. They
took off and didn't stop again. "The gun was just to scare them off," Sister
Thomasine said. "I wanted to give them a good whipping."
Ledger, Columbus, GA
An intruder will remember the night he invaded the basement of St.
Mary's Catholic School in Covington, Ky. He found himself looking down
the barrel of a .38 revolver held by pistol-packing Rev. Edwin B. Heile,
who surprised him and took him into custody until police arrived.