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November 22, 2017, 08:51 AM | #1 |
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Man Claims Self-Defense in Killeen Shooting
A bystander captured the shooting of Curtis Shelley via a cell phone. The video shows a lot; but not all of the pre-shooting confrontation. Details are still sketchy but it looks like both parties missed some opportunities to de-escalate.
The video is here: https://m.liveleak.com/view?i=298_1511216541 A news story of the shooting is here: http://www.kcentv.com/mobile/article...oyee/492740072 One important lesson this shows is both that video cameras are ubiquitous and yet they can still fail to catch important details in a shooting. So you have to assume anything it shows that would reflect on you negatively will be recorded but that nothing that will help your case will be recorded. |
November 22, 2017, 09:24 AM | #2 |
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You can make a video but not shout out that you've called 911 and stops this?
Who I need the truck. If it's the guy with the shotgun it's prison for you. Looks like the shooter is related to police there and Rangers involved. |
November 22, 2017, 11:05 AM | #3 |
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Shooting an unarmed person will indeed be hard to justify, particularly if there was an "ongoing dispute". Words never beget violence.
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November 22, 2017, 11:57 AM | #4 |
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I want to know if its the shooter's truck, if he got out of that truck and confronted the other guy. If the other guy jumped out and confronted him thats a much better SD claim. Its dressed like he was about to go hunting. Very strange.
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November 22, 2017, 04:32 PM | #5 |
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I was unable to watch the video all the way to the end. I watched as much as I could before cutting out, and to me it looks like it ended in murder.
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November 22, 2017, 05:13 PM | #6 |
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This is an interesting example in how potential jury members might view someone drawing if they are following the Tueller drill and potentially start shooting. When is too close? In this horrible example the shooter did back up quite a bit before shooting. When is there a threat level where a jury finds this reasonable self defense?
Watching it again, the shooter actually shoots when the shootee is standing with his head bent forward (taunting him? threatening to charge him?). Again, if the shooter pulled up in his truck which is in the middle of the street, wowsa. Last edited by zincwarrior; November 22, 2017 at 05:20 PM. |
November 22, 2017, 05:48 PM | #7 |
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I hardly watched the video before. I did not see the shooter backing up all the way to the truck. This time I watch the video all the way till the end... still murder. I do not agree that bowing the head forward like that was a man, "about to charge in for fight." I have been training all kinds of martial arts for decades, I know peoples body mechanics.. the guy bowing his head forward also could have meant, "he was getting tired, and he was beginning to back down."
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November 22, 2017, 06:20 PM | #8 |
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That at the lest is 2nd degree murder. I live 20 miles from where that happened. If I were in a jury box my vote would be guilty. It looks to me like the shooter was unaware of the fact that someone was filming the confrontation.
Also there was an ongoing dispute between the two. The shooter is the owner of the truck. He stopped, and got out, opened the rear door, and took the gun out of the back of the truck. He went to the low ready position for a moment as was about to put the gun back in the truck. The shootee then started coming towards him so he brought the gun back up. The shootee then taunted him some more. The shooter then lost patience and shot the guy. No doubt he is going to be going to a cell. If he is lucky he will get 2nd degree murder, and beg for mercy from the court. I live in this area, and can assure you. Bucky Harris (Assistant DA) is going to go for blood on this one.
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No matter how many times you do it and nothing happens it only takes something going wrong one time to kill you. Last edited by m&p45acp10+1; November 22, 2017 at 06:28 PM. |
November 22, 2017, 06:29 PM | #9 | |
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Frankly I would not want to be on the jury due to the linkage with the PD there. |
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November 22, 2017, 06:29 PM | #10 |
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Yeah I've been thinking about it, think about it this way, if you take out a rifle and point it at me now I have every right to shoot you
Okay, the guy with the right to self-defense in this video is the one who got shot For all we know the dead man was saying, "Put the gun down Put the gun down let's fight let's fight I'm unarmed I'm unarmed." By the way posturing your head forward, in the manner this victim seems to have been doing so, is a classic sign of neuroses and not a sign of charging in for a fight.
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"Was always kinda partial to Roy Rogers actually. I really like those sequined shirts..." Last edited by Psychedelic Bang; November 22, 2017 at 08:29 PM. Reason: grammar and mechanics |
November 22, 2017, 06:42 PM | #11 |
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Are you there other articles or updates on this?
So to make this a hypothetical, switch the gun for a pistol and lose the truck ( aka shooter and victim don't know each other). At what point is it a justified shoot? |
November 22, 2017, 06:54 PM | #12 |
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From just the video, it looks like premeditated murder to me.
But I'm sure there's more to it.
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November 22, 2017, 08:08 PM | #13 |
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Looked like murder. The victim was taunting maybe, but when does that justify lethal force. As for shouting at a stranger wielding a firearm on a residential street....I wouldn't and I can't blame the videographer for not doing it either.
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November 22, 2017, 08:36 PM | #14 |
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Crazy that the shooter hasn't been detained.
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November 23, 2017, 08:17 AM | #15 |
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I am not surprised.
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November 23, 2017, 11:21 AM | #16 |
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It does make the point that pointing a gun at someone doesn't guarantee that you will get compliance. Many folks have posted that they would hold someone at gunpoint for some reason and seem to expect it will be a magic mind control device.
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November 23, 2017, 11:55 AM | #17 | |
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November 23, 2017, 12:00 PM | #18 |
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Because we are logical. It is logical to expect compliance. But we are not dealing with logical people.
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November 23, 2017, 12:17 PM | #19 |
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Excellent point
You got it right Zincwarrior.
It's normal to apply logic. Esp. in the heat of passion logic simply does not apply.
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November 23, 2017, 12:21 PM | #20 | |
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1. He could have been severely learning disabled. 2. He could have been emotionally disturbed (so could the shooter) 3. He could have been out of his mind on drugs. We also are lacking the foreground. We have no idea what made the shooter stop his truck, get out and reach for the weapon - in the eyes of the law, that may very well be irrelevant. The only thing that is relevant is, "was the shooter under enough threat to use deadly force." I see somebody who shot a unarmed man, and the unarmed man may have been emotionally disturbed, or learning disabled. I see an enraged man with a rifle, who exited his car, and escalated a situation to the point of murder. The reason I see that is specifically: the victim did not close distance. There was a lot of range, and space, there was no threat of severe bodily injury and harm in the moment the shooter pulled the trigger. And just because you point a rifle at somebody doesn't mean you should be complied with. That's contradictory to my right to self defense. If you point a rifle at me, I am going to immediately draw and shoot, you can only fire first and wound me beyond my ability to respond
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"Was always kinda partial to Roy Rogers actually. I really like those sequined shirts..." Last edited by Psychedelic Bang; November 23, 2017 at 12:27 PM. |
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November 23, 2017, 03:50 PM | #21 |
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I've watched the video three times now, and I don't see how this could be considered a justified shooting. I didn't see a weapon in the dead guy's hands, but he may have had a knife or something that isn't picked up in the video. It does look like he was taunting the shooter, but surely that isn't grounds for killing someone in Texas.
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November 23, 2017, 04:41 PM | #22 |
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The video is disturbing. I keep watching looking for any reason I can see to pull the trigger, but there is none. The victims hands are "busy" around the wasteband, but I never see a weapon, closed fist, or anything more than an agitated presence. The fact that the shooter is still walking free only adds to the disturbing nature of this footage. There are many, many questions and few answers.
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November 23, 2017, 07:13 PM | #23 |
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Obviously the unarmed victim had no regard for his safety. People aren't rational or logical. That goes for the shooter too.
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November 23, 2017, 08:22 PM | #24 | |
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People are not expected to act rationally, or logically when a weapon is pointed at them. "We can't have it both ways." If we expect people in these situations to act with all logic and rational than we can not say, "train, train, train, because when somebody points a weapon at you, your fear and adrenaline is going to be engaged, and you will lose your ability to act rationally and logically." Here is just one article of, "tens, of thousands," that will tell you an emergency situation requires significant training to handle effectively. https://www.gunholstersunlimited.com...ing-is-a-must/ The very second the shooter exited his truck, and picked up a rifle, the dynamics of the situation where such: a man we know who has a rifle, and a victim we know, or assume to be unarmed. No matter how logical or rational a person is at any given time, in the face of a weapon, and we in the self defense crowd say this all the time, "you revert to your training." Most people, have no training. Do we know what the victim was saying to man who was pointing a rifle at him? It could have, "you are big piggy, and you should play in the sand box," and it also could have been, "put the gun down man, why do you need a rifle, come on put the gun down." We don't know the audio. If anything like, "put the gun down," was said, than I have to assume the victim had regard for his own safety. The victim had no training, no idea how to handle the situation. Frankly, I'm not sure how I would do in a situation like that... Somebody pointing a rifle at me? I'm not sure, I'm hoping I would be fast enough and well trained enough to defend myself.
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"Was always kinda partial to Roy Rogers actually. I really like those sequined shirts..." Last edited by Psychedelic Bang; November 23, 2017 at 08:28 PM. |
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November 24, 2017, 08:52 AM | #25 |
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As I'm neither an expert witness nor a jury member, I'll withhold any verdict on this. Though I agree it likely won't end well for the shooter, it certainly ended very badly for the other guy.
This illustrates another "danger" of the prevalence of video cameras everywhere--the viewing public has probably seen this stuff before those involved in the trial have. John Q. Public has probably made up his mind long before the process has really completed. Look at all the police shootings in which a partial video is shown and becomes famous overnight, and everyone (politicians included) have already rendered judgment, and then people are screaming about how "biased" it is that the process hasn't already condemned the cop too. In any of these cases, John Q. Public has a few seconds of video and a lifetime of potential bias to go from, vs loads of forensic evidence and analysis that have to be collected by people who actually know what they're looking at. Sorry, rant over. This has nothing to do with this video Just an observation and pet peeve of mine. If this video were to go public like others have, likely the entire world would rush to some kind of judgment long before a real verdict could be reached. Which goes back to a comment made above about videos recording details that could condemn you but probably never acquit you--if something like this ever happens to YOU, however justified the use of force, it's entirely possible that half the US population will already have pronounced you evil before you ever get to see a judge. |
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