Key Takeaways
- In Biloxi, a neighbor confronted a naked man on his porch after a homeowner called for help.
- The situation escalated into a violent attack where the neighbor shot the attacker, who then overpowered him and took his gun.
- Police found the neighbor with facial injuries, and the attacker was later discovered dead on shore.
- The incident highlights the unpredictable nature of approaching strangers and the need for caution in such situations.
- A handgun does not guarantee safety, and weapon retention is crucial during a confrontation.
Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
BILOXI, MISS. — A neighbor in Biloxi answered a homeowner’s call to check on his porch Saturday night and ended up in a fight for his life. He shot the attacker multiple times, lost his gun mid-fight, and survived with facial injuries. The naked man who attacked him walked away, returned to the water, and was found dead on shore hours later.
According to WXXV News 25 and the Biloxi Police Department, the call chain started around 8:00 p.m. on May 23, 2026. A homeowner in the 11000 block of Woolmarket Lake Road watched on his Ring doorbell as a naked white male climbed out of the Biloxi River, walked up his stairs, and stepped onto his porch. Other people in the area were calling 911 about the same man.
The homeowner was not there. He called a next-door neighbor and asked him to go check on the house.
When the neighbor walked up and asked if the man needed help, police say the man charged him and started swinging.
The neighbor drew and fired multiple rounds, hitting the attacker. The man kept coming. He took the neighbor’s gun, walked off the property, and went back into the water.
Heavy flooding made the scene hard to reach. Officers were transported in by boat. They found the neighbor with facial lacerations and bruising. Investigators reviewed video from the home’s security system, which recorded the encounter. Rescue boats searched the water, and the attacker’s body was found on shore around 2:00 a.m. Sunday, May 24, 2026.
The neighbor did what most decent people might do. A friend asked him to check the house. He walked over, saw a stranger on the porch, and led with “do you need help.” That is the assumption many bring to a porch encounter, the assumption that words will work.
They did not. Once that man was on top of him swinging, the neighbor was facing an imminent threat of serious bodily harm, and drawing and firing was lawful, justified, and exactly what the Second Amendment, a fundamental civil right, exists to protect.
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Here is the part every armed citizen needs to sit with. The neighbor put rounds on target. The attacker kept fighting, closed the gap, and took the gun. The only reason this is not a story about a Good Samaritan murdered with his own firearm is that the attacker chose to walk back to the river instead of turning the weapon on him. That is not a margin anyone should plan around.
A handgun is not a magic wand. Pistol rounds do not reliably stop a determined attacker, and once you are in grappling range with a weapon out, your gun becomes the thing the other person is trying to take. Retention is a skill, and it is not optional.
It is also worth saying out loud that walking up on an unknown person, even with good intentions, puts you inside that person’s reach before you know what you are dealing with. If a friend called me and asked me to check on his porch while a naked stranger was standing on it, my next call is 911, not the front steps. Distance, cover, and time are free. Closing that gap is what turned this into a fight.
I am glad the neighbor is alive. The lesson he paid for in stitches and bruises is one the rest of us get for free if we are willing to learn it.
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