He Was Out There Acting As A Police Officer, When He Has No Police Powers
BY Herschel Smith7 years, 12 months ago
mySA:
A Converse man who used his AR-15 rifle to detain four men he thought were going to burglarize his neighbor’s home last month now finds himself on the wrong side of the law.
Coty Bob McDonnell, 31, made his initial appearance Monday on a charge of deadly conduct, a misdemeanor, but the case was reset for next month.
Converse police arrested McDonnell on the night of Oct. 22 or early Oct. 23 after he detained the men, believing they were burglars, according to an account provided by his neighbor, Doug Stearns, and his lawyer, Daniel De La Garza.
Charging him might have a chilling effect on Texans who want to protect their property, they argued. McDonnell himself declined comment, citing the pending case.
Texas law gives some leeway to persons who believe they have been asked to protect the property of a third party, allowing the use of deadly force to prevent theft or criminal mischief, but the circumstances of McDonnell’s case differed considerably when described by police and his neighbor.
Converse police say McDonnell went too far when he chased the four down the street and blocked their way out with his vehicle. The four were charged with possession of drug paraphernalia, but not burglary. They told officers they were on their way to a party, according to a police report.
A Converse man who used his AR-15 rifle to detain four men he thought were going to burglarize his neighbor’s home last month now finds himself on the wrong side of the law.
Coty Bob McDonnell, 31, made his initial appearance Monday on a charge of deadly conduct, a misdemeanor, but the case was reset for next month.
Converse police arrested McDonnell on the night of Oct. 22 or early Oct. 23 after he detained the men, believing they were burglars, according to an account provided by his neighbor, Doug Stearns, and his lawyer, Daniel De La Garza.
Charging him might have a chilling effect on Texans who want to protect their property, they argued. McDonnell himself declined comment, citing the pending case.
Texas law gives some leeway to persons who believe they have been asked to protect the property of a third party, allowing the use of deadly force to prevent theft or criminal mischief, but the circumstances of McDonnell’s case differed considerably when described by police and his neighbor.
Converse police say McDonnell went too far when he chased the four down the street and blocked their way out with his vehicle. The four were charged with possession of drug paraphernalia, but not burglary. They told officers they were on their way to a party, according to a police report.
“These kids just stopped in the roadway to change drivers,” said Assistant Chief Rex Rheiner. “He pursued them, and when he pursued them down the road is when he left the realm of protection of property.
“He pointed the weapon at them,” Rheiner added. “He was out there acting as a police officer, when he has no police powers.”
Stearns, 51, an Air Force retiree, said he had asked McDonnell to keep an eye on his house while he was out of town and gave him a key. Their subdivision has had a rash of burglaries and recently saw a Converse school vandalized, he said. McDonnell even mowed his lawn and took care of his cat, Stearns said.
Stearns said McDonnell told him he had noticed a car coming down the street with its lights off and when it stopped near Stearns’ home, three men got out and approached or entered Stearns’ driveway. McDonnell grabbed his rifle and approached them and, “They said, ‘Oh (expletive), there’s somebody here,’” Stearns said.
McDonnell prevented the group from leaving in the car they arrived in, but had put away his weapon by the time police arrived, according to Stearns.
He called the prosecution a waste of time and money.
“I think it’s ridiculous,” Stearns said. “We should be able to protect our homes and do so in a way that doesn’t cause a loss of life.”
Most states don’t recognize the right to deadly force to prevent theft, but Texas does if I’m not mistaken. So does Missuouri, to some lesser extent.
The police chief doesn’t really know how this all went down, since he wasn’t there. I don’t know either, but there’s just something that tells me the founding fathers would have looked askance at the notion that a blue costume somehow grants powers that other men don’t have.
It seems to me that the real problem here is that the chief is offended that someone else out there sees himself empowered. The chief would have defended until his dying breath the right of his officers to wield weapons at night in the presence of suspected thieves and detain anyone they deemed appropriate.
It’s the blue costume, folks. It’s special.
On November 25, 2016 at 10:35 am, Blake said:
Breaking and entering an empty house for a party isn’t unknown. Along with trashing the residence while “partying.”
Lights off and drug paraphernalia? Yeah, just innocent youths out to have some fun..
On November 25, 2016 at 11:10 am, Ned Weatherby said:
Heck, Herschel – we wo read your blog all know that had the police been alerted and actually arrived in time, the “youths” would be deceased. TPTB hate it when a “mere citizen” prevents a crime. Supposed to wait for the police to show up – and maybe write a report.
On November 25, 2016 at 11:14 am, SunwolfNC said:
“chased the four down the street and blocked their way out with his vehicle.”
That’s what’s going to cook him. If you have to chase someone away from the scene of the crime, then you gone from victim to aggressor in the eyes of the courts.
On November 25, 2016 at 11:29 am, Iustinianus said:
Texas allows an individual to use deadly force to protect property “if he reasonably believes that the property cannot be protected or recovered by other means.” The actual language of the statute dealing with use of force to protect property in Texas can be found here: http://codes.findlaw.com/tx/penalcode/penal-sect-9-42.html
Given the gross misapplication of the law in this case, it would seem that had the man waited for them to break into the home to take his neighbor’s property, and then dispatched all three of the criminals as they fled, he likely would not be facing prosecution.
Missouri, on the other hand, technically does not permit the use of deadly force to prevent theft or to protect property. Deadly force in Missouri may only lawfully be used if one is defending his home, his car (an extension of his home) or to prevent death, serious physical injury, or forcible felony.
http://www.moga.mo.gov/mostatutes/stathtml/56300000311.HTML
On November 25, 2016 at 11:31 am, Duke Norfolk said:
Job security!
It’s tricky territory for sure. I think he took a big risk (not necessarily from them) in pursuing them. I know I wouldn’t trust that the “justice” system would see it my way and keep me out of jail, or from picking up a criminal record. You’d really need to know the local prosecutor and even the police chief/sheriff pretty well to know how that would turn out. I don’t think he did.
On November 26, 2016 at 7:03 pm, ProudInfidel said:
Unless it’s a declared emergency situation, with looters being hunted down or a curfew – pursuing anyone not having committed a felony against your person – not a good idea. He may get prosecuted for unlawful detention. And what for? Holding some punks at bay who trespassed? This is the way folks end up going into bankruptcy and feeding the bottom feeding lawyers. Jeez, use your heads for more than a hat rack.
On November 27, 2016 at 7:31 pm, DucLap said:
Simple fix. Make Coty Bob McDonnell a Reserve Deputy, retroactive appointment. Cheers, America.