Ravenwood - 01/26/05 07:00 AM
Two Georgia teenagers went into a store intending to rob it. Both left in body bags. What happened in between is quite compelling.
The cash register at Shoat's Grocery and Package Store in Oglethorpe County held just $300 Monday when the two teenagers walked in.In other parts of the country, Turner and Doster would have been led away in handcuffs for having the nerve to defend their own lives. Thankfully some people still understand that the government is not responsible for our safety.If they had been patient, the would-be robbers could have had it.
Gloria Turner and husband Bobby Doster were about to hand over money when one teenager forced a shootout. [...]
"I'd have given it to them. Our insurance would have covered it," said Gloria Turner, who has owned the store for eight years with her husband.
Turner, 56, was rearranging the store, in the tiny community of Hutchins, when the teenagers walked in Monday evening.
One was wearing a wig that partly covered his eyes, prompting Turner to quip, "Can you see to walk with that thing on?"
The teen mumbled something, she recalled. He ran past Turner and shoved her husband, Bobby "Shoats" Doster, against the bakery counter.
The second teen pulled a white skullcap over his face, pushed Turner to the cash register and demanded money.
"I was about to give it to them . . . when the first guy says, 'You're not moving fast enough,' and pulls out a gun," Turner said Tuesday.
The teen aimed the gun at her husband and fired. The bullet missed. His gun jammed.
That was enough for Doster, who pulled out a .380 from his pocket. At the same time, his wife grabbed the 9 mm she kept under under the counter.
Both began firing at the teenagers, who ran to the back of the store for cover. A full-fledged gunbattle erupted.
The teens crouched behind a meat counter. The one with the gun popped up every few seconds to fire another round.
The unarmed teen kept shouting, "Shoot them! Shoot them!" while tossing at the couple whatever items he could get his hands on, Turner said.
The exchange of gunfire lasted less than five minutes "but it felt like hours," Turner said.
She remembered firing with one hand and dialing 911 with the other.
Deputies arrived four minutes later to find the store littered with shell casings. Both teenagers lay sprawled on the floor - one shot several times, the other with a bullet in his chest, said Sheriff Mike Smith. Authorities withheld the identities of the teenagers until relatives could be notified. One was 17, the other 19, police said. Both were from Athens.
Turner and her husband will not be charged, Smith said.
"People have a right to protect their lives and their property," Smith said.
"We don't encourage them to take the law in their hands, but sometimes they are left with no other choice."
Because one boy was a juvenile, the names have not been released. But how long before someone surfaces to tell us what little angels these two were?
Category: Defending Your Life
Comments (7) top link me
One was wearing a wig that partly covered his eyes, prompting Turner to quip, "Can you see to walk with that thing on?"The teen aimed the gun at her husband and fired. The bullet missed.
Apparently he couldn't see to shoot with that thing on.
Posted by: Nick Bourbaki at January 26, 2005 8:44 AMAs a follow up, someone should find out if their insurance covers the damage and/or if their insurance company drops coverage on them given their newly-uncovered proclivity to shoot up their store.
Posted by: Brian J. at January 26, 2005 8:44 AMAs a 2nd Ammendment supporter I really hate the last comment of taking the law into your own hands. They did not violate nor punish these juvies, they followed the law by protecting themselves.
As a LEO in training, I know he said that to keep his immediat supervisor, or the chief, or some politician, or some news harpy, or the general public from grilling his butt over the police supporting "wild west" shootouts.
Posted by: Rhett at January 26, 2005 2:47 PMEvery once in a great while, the good guys win one; this is one of those times.
Posted by: kjo at January 26, 2005 4:01 PMIf you travel the area, stop in and buy something from these people and let them know that you support Second Amendment rights. The area, east of Atlanta, has some fine roads for motorcycling and lots of friendly people.
Posted by: Steve Scudder at January 26, 2005 6:24 PMI see in the UK an increasing number of storekeepers are winding up dead in robberies. I wonder how insurance companies like having to pay out on these claims.
I grew up in NYC and whenever someone used to sound off on gun control I'd point to two stores, one was a liquor store that had an NRA member sign in the window, the other was a pharmacy that had a sign that said "Guns kill."
I asked which store they thought was the one that got robbed. The pharmacy eventually closed when its owner was killed in a robbery. My dad told me that guns guarantee you freedom. He ought to have known. The communists tried to take his away from him in the old country.
Posted by: TJ Jackson at January 26, 2005 10:28 PMNot releasing his name is a nice touch. ``All of his friends wondered what had happened to him : `I wonder what happened to shithead,' '' to take Catch-22's characterization of Lt. Schiesskopf.
Posted by: Ron Hardin at January 28, 2005 3:48 AM(c) Ravenwood and Associates, 1990 - 2014