TX - Citizen Shoots Man Attempting To Hijack Bus

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A wild crime spree ended in gunfire Tuesday when a citizen shot a suspect who was trying to hijack a Metro bus, Houston police said.

According to HPD, it all began at about 5:30 p.m. when Henry Hankston III, 37, carjacked a person who was visiting friends at a residence in the 5200 block of Fair Green in southeast Houston.

"Suspect had approached them, appeared to be under the influence of some kind of drugs, apparently came up and started assaulting the person and took his vehicle from him," said Sgt. Robert Torres, with HPD’s Homicide Division.

He said Hankston did not have a weapon, but used objects that he had picked up on the street.

"We were told that he was possibly on PCP, or his behavior was consistent with that of somebody who was on PCP—really hyper and extremely strong," Torres said.

Hankston fled northbound on Martin Luther King. About a block away from the carjacking, he struck the first vehicle and continued driving, Torres said.

"When he got to the intersection, he hit three other vehicles until he got to the point where his vehicle was disabled, got out of that vehicle and ran up to a bus that was turning through the intersection," Torres said.

Torres said the suspect entered the bus and began assaulting the driver, in an apparent attempt to hijack the bus, until the driver of a car idling behind the bus noticed what was happening.

"This person is a licensed concealed handgun carrier. He got out of the vehicle [and] went to the bus to try to intervene in the assault that was taking place," he said. "He did pull the suspect away from the driver and engaged in a physical confrontation with the suspect."

As the two men struggled, the gun discharged and struck the suspect in the upper abdomen, Torres said.

"He got up and went and sat in his own car which, by the way, was on fire, and waited there, shot, and he was still there when the police and paramedics got here," Torres said.

http://www.khou.com/news/LIVE-VIDEO-Police-investigate-shooting-multiple-car-wreck-91655614.html
 
The totality of the circumstances here would make going after Mr CCW a tough sell to a jury. This is probably not an easy "if in MA" type of alternative. It may play out the same here as there.

The biggest difference is that in TX "MR CCW" likely will not ever have to face a jury to begin with, so he can keep that 30,000 bucks or whatever it costs in his pocket.

-Mike
 
He said Hankston did not have a weapon, but used objects that he had picked up on the street.

That's a line worth paying attention to.

The biggest difference is that in TX "MR CCW" likely will not ever have to face a jury to begin with, so he can keep that 30,000 bucks or whatever it costs in his pocket.

-Mike

Because Texas has codified deadly force into law, so everyone knows what's what.
 
Talk about poor victim selection. A bus in Texas has a high likelihood of someone carrying being on it.
 
In MA the judge probably wouldn't allow the jury to hear what Mr. PCP "might" have done prior to Mr. CCW seeing him.
 
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