What's wrong with this picture?
by Robert A. Waters
February 6, 2002
KeepAndBearArms.com -- A recent article by Michael L. Besch in Conservative News Service
illuminates the extremist position of many of those who oppose gun rights.
It all started when student Christie Caywood organized a chapter of the
Second Amendment Sisters (SAS) on the campus of Mount Holyoke College. A
series of rapes at area universities had alerted students to the need for better protection since even campus security officers don't carry
guns. Caywood's stated purpose for forming a campus chapter was to allow qualified students to carry concealed weapons on campus in order to
defend themselves against rapists and other violent criminals. Within a short time, nearly fifty students had joined the group.
But Nancy Hwa, spokeswoman for the Brady Campaign to
"Prevent Gun Violence", criticized the pro-gun rights
organization: "I don't know where they get the idea that [guns are] the number-one self-protection
method," she said. "It's unfortunate that these groups are spreading misinformation about the usefulness of firearms for
self-protection."
So what is the best way to fend off a rapist?
Here are a few examples of methods that worked:
- On November 18, 1998, Adrian Rodricka Cathey broke into the apartment of
a University of North Carolina-Charlotte co-ed. He woke the sleeping
teen, and used a hunting knife to subdue her. But as he attempted to
rape her, the unidentified woman reached into a nightstand, pulled out a
pistol, and blasted Cathey dead. DNA tests revealed that he was the
serial rapist who had stalked the campus for nearly a year, assaulting
at least four students. Cathey had previously been charged with three
counts of attempted murder during violent sexual assaults on young
women. There's little doubt that the armed co-ed saved many women the
trauma of being violated.
�
- In the early morning of August 9, 2000, a panicked call came into the
Pasco County, Florida Emergency Communications Center. The caller screamed, "I just shot a man. A man was just in my house and tried
raping me..." When police arrived a few minutes later, they found Robert
Metz lying dead with a bullet wound to his neck. He wore gloves and a
mask, and still held a knife in his hand. Maria Pittaras, the owner of
the home, stated that she awoke with the man on top of her. But as he
held the knife to her throat and threatened to rape her, Pittaras pulled
a pistol out of her nightstand and shot him. Her father had recently
given her the pistol for self-protection.
�
- On November 18, 2000, seventy-two-year-old Jean Zamarripa of Colorado
Springs heard a prowler at her back door. She grabbed a handgun and a
telephone. As the homeowner dialed 911, the door suddenly crashed open,
and an intruder entered the room. Zamarripa opened fire, hitting the
invader with three shots and sending him fleeing. A severely wounded
Anthony Allen Peralez was quickly apprehended. DNA tests revealed that
he was the serial rapist who had recently been terrorizing elderly women
in the city. In graphic court testimony, several victims spoke of the
beatings they endured at the hands of the assailant, as well as the
psychological, physical, and sexual torture he inflicted. Because Jean
Zamarripa was armed, Peralez is currently serving four life sentences.
�
- On July 21, 2001, an unidentified Nashville woman killed a man who
attempted to rape her. The assailant entered the woman's house and tried
to overpower her. The woman pulled out a handgun and shot him in the
head.
�
- In the early morning hours of January 1, 2002, Nathan Victor Melikidse
broke into the home of an unidentified Boulder, Colorado couple. After
tying them up, Melikidse went through the house looking for valuables.
During his search, he found the couple's teenage daughter sleeping in
her bedroom. As he brutally raped her, the girl's father freed himself
and grabbed a shotgun. After calling 911, the homeowner confronted the
assailant, handcuffing him until police arrived. Melikidse was charged
with numerous crimes but investigators insisted that he was lucky the
girl's father didn't kill him.
�
- On the night of January 15, 2002, a Dallas resident captured a serial
child molester. Fernandez A. Perez broke into the home of William Hazelwood and went straight to the bedroom of his sleeping 15-year-old
daughter. The homeowner heard glass breaking, grabbed his handgun, and
went to investigate. Hazelwood opened the door to his daughter's room
and found Perez standing by the bed with his pants down. The homeowner
then held him at gunpoint and called police. Outside the girl's window,
investigators found photos of children and other "trophies" of a sexual
predator. A 12-year-old girl who'd been sexually molested in October,
2001, later identified Perez as her attacker. Police commended Hazelwood
for his restraint in not killing the assailant.
In each of these cases, rapists or child molesters were killed,
incapacitated, or captured by armed citizens. Dozens of future victims were likely spared the ordeal of violent sexual assault.
And yet, in her comments, Hwa labeled the Second Amendment Sisters an
"extremist" organization.
What's wrong with this picture?
Related Reading
Robert Waters' Articles Published on KABA
Robert Waters' Website
�