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11 Defensive Gun Use Cases in March That Kept Citizens from Becoming Victims
Just before Easter weekend, a 20-year-old student opened fire inside Florida State University’s student union, killing two and wounding six others before being shot and apprehended by law enforcement officers. Recent reports suggest that the suspect suffered from significant childhood trauma related to his parents’ divorce and custody battles, and many of his classmates had previously expressed concerns about his alarming rhetoric.
Almost immediately after the shooting, some gun control activists sought to cast the blame on supposedly “lax” gun laws, and they called for a slew of new restrictions on the right to keep and bear arms.
It doesn’t matter to them, of course, that Florida prohibits individuals under the age of 21 from purchasing firearms or that the gunman used a handgun belonging to his stepmom, a sheriff’s deputy. Nor does it seem to matter that Florida’s permitless public carry laws apply only to people 21 or older, and even then, the law still prohibits the carrying of firearms on college or university campuses. Apparently forgotten, too, is the fact that Florida already imposes waiting periods on gun purchases and has so-called red flag laws that allow local law enforcement to disarm allegedly dangerous persons via court orders.
At the same time, many of these gun control advocates refuse to acknowledge the very real barriers their preferred restrictions would place on the right of peaceable citizens to keep and bear arms—a right that often makes all the difference in the world for victims of violent crime.
Almost every major study has found that Americans use their firearms in self-defense between 500,000 and 3 million times annually, according to the most recent report on the subject by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2021, a professor at the Georgetown McDonough School of Business conducted the most comprehensive study ever on the issue, and concluded that roughly 1.6 million defensive gun uses occur in the United States every year.
For this reason, The Daily Signal publishes a monthly article highlighting some of the previous month’s many news stories on defensive gun use that you may have missed—or that might not have made it to the national spotlight in the first place. (Read accounts from past months and years here.)
The examples below represent only a small portion of the news stories on defensive gun use during crimes that we found in March. You may explore more by using The Heritage Foundation’s interactive Defensive Gun Use Database.
March 2, Houston, Texas: Police say that three armed teens broke into the home of a well-known online influencer and demanded access to her cryptocurrency account at gunpoint—allegedly pistol-whipping her out of frustration. Eventually, the woman led the intruders toward her husband, who was armed and waiting in a different part of the house. The husband opened fire at the intruders as they approached, wounding one and sending them all fleeing. Police tracked down and apprehended the suspects within several days, and they are now each charged with aggravated kidnapping and aggravated robbery.
March 4, Lake City, Florida: A former MMA fighter broke into the home of a person who had an active restraining order against him and “rushed” toward a resident in a threatening manner. Someone inside the home fatally shot the man in self-defense. Several children and adults were home at the time, but none appears to have been injured.
March 9, Channelview, Texas: After weeks of escalation, a man with a history of stalking and making threats tried to break into his ex-girlfriend’s home while armed with a handgun. The woman’s current boyfriend—who also lived at the home—grabbed his own firearm and fatally shot the armed would-be intruder before he could harm anyone.
March 10, Chesterfield County, Virginia: Police say that a woman shot and wounded her boyfriend in self-defense after he assaulted and strangled her during a domestic violence incident. The boyfriend was charged with strangulation and domestic assault.
March 12, Reading, Pennsylvania: When a resident saw that a parked car was blocking his driveway, he approached the driver to complain. The driver and an acquaintance then got out of the car and confronted the resident “with their arms raised.” The driver and resident exchanged punches until the driver pulled a knife and stabbed the resident. At that point, the resident drew a handgun and shot his assailant in self-defense. The knife-wielding driver had been charged with aggravated assault.
March 13, Seattle, Washington: A man was walking his dog when another dog grabbed his fury friend by the neck and refused to let go despite the man’s attempts to separate the two dogs. The man ultimately drew a handgun and fatally shot the aggressive dog in defense of his own pup before calling 911.
March 19, Memphis, Tennessee: While waiting outside his girlfriend’s apartment complex, a man saw a would-be car thief enter his car, which he’d left running. The man chased the thief as he tried to drive away, so the thief shot at him. Fortunately, the man was armed and returned fire, striking the suspect several times and severely wounding him.
March 22, Clovis, New Mexico: A shotgun-wielding homeowner successfully fended off a would-be intruder, shooting and wounding an 18-year-old who tried to break into the house in the middle of the night.
March 24, Hardeeville, South Carolina: Police say that an armed man tried unsuccessfully to carjack a food delivery driver before fleeing on foot and finding a new victim. Unfortunately for the would-be carjacker, his second victim was also armed (and, apparently, a better shot). The two exchanged gunfire, and the victim’s rounds struck the carjacker at least three times, killing him. It appears that neither the first nor the second victim was injured.
March 25, Parker, Washington: A resident was getting into his vehicle when he saw another car pull up with two younger men inside, one of whom made threats about harming people inside the resident’s home. After the younger men drove away, the resident returned to his house, informed a second resident about the threats. This second resident armed himself with a .40-caliber handgun and went outside. He saw the same car turn around and speed back toward the house with its headlights turned off, then returned fire at the younger men in the car when they began shooting at the house. The two younger men—who police later determined were brothers—were injured during the shootout and fled, only to be taken into police custody when they sought medical treatment at a nearby hospital.
March 28, Los Banos, California: Several armed intruders forced their way into a home in the middle of the night, only to be confronted by a homeowner with a legally possessed firearm. The homeowner engaged the suspects in a shootout, avoiding their bullets while striking and wounding three of them. Police ultimately arrested four of the five suspects believed to have been involved in the home invasion.
Nobody seriously doubts that what happened at Florida State University is a tragedy, the recurrence of which we are all invested in preventing. But any solutions must not come at the cost of overly burdening the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens, especially when those burdens threaten to interfere with the ability of innocent victims to protect themselves and others.
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