Key Takeaways

  • A homeowner shot an intruder who assaulted him in his home, with police confirming no public threat exists.
  • The resident’s actions were justified due to the immediate threat presented by the intruder, regardless of any potential medical condition.
  • Witnesses claim the intruder had Alzheimer’s or dementia, complicating the emotional aspect of the incident.
  • The incident highlights the legal right to defend oneself against imminent threats, despite the tragic backdrop.
  • The investigation is ongoing, and the facts will clarify once the district attorney reviews the case.

Estimated reading time: 4 minutes

MIDWEST CITY, OK — A homeowner shot and killed a man who entered his home and began assaulting him early Thursday morning. The basic facts here are not complicated, even if the backstory is sad.

According to the Midwest City Police Department, officers responded to a shooting on Lloyd Drive at about 7:30 a.m. A male subject entered a neighbor’s residence unannounced and started assaulting the resident. The resident shot him. The man was taken to a local hospital and pronounced dead.

Investigators are still speaking with witnesses and people connected to those involved. The department says there is no threat to the public, and once the investigation is complete, the case will be referred to the Oklahoma County District Attorney’s Office for review.

The key fact is the assault. This is not a story about someone shooting a person for simply being on their property. The intruder entered the home and physically attacked the resident. Deadly force is justified against an imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm, and being attacked inside your own home is exactly that kind of moment. The homeowner did what he had to do to defend himself.

Where it gets sadder is in the comments under the police department’s own post. Several neighbors and people who say they knew the man told a fuller story. They claimed he had Alzheimer’s or dementia, that he had once owned the home next door and let a friend live there, and that in his condition he may have believed he was returning to his own house. One said the two men were close. Another said she pulled public property records and found him listed as the former owner.

I cannot confirm those claims. They are not in any police statement or news report I have found, and the case is still open. But there is no reason to dismiss them either, and if they are accurate, it is genuinely tragic for the man and his family.

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Here is the thing though. It does not change what the homeowner was facing. When a person breaks into your home and starts attacking you, you do not have the luxury of diagnosing them first. You do not know their medical history in that moment. You know someone is in your home and putting hands on you, and you have seconds to react. Whether the attacker knew where he was or not, the resident still had every right to protect himself.

Both of those things can be true at once. It can be a heartbreaking situation for the man who died and his loved ones, and the homeowner can still be completely justified in defending his life. One does not cancel out the other.

The comment section split the way these always do. Plenty of people kept it simple. “Gotta protect your home.” Others wanted folks to slow down and consider the dementia angle before piling on. Both sides have a point, but neither changes the legal and practical reality of what happened in that house.

The takeaway for those of us who carry is a steady one. You defend against the threat in front of you based on what is happening, not based on who the person is or why they are there. That is what the law asks, and it is what the moment demands. The aftermath can be sad and complicated, and you can still have done the right thing.

The facts are limited for now, and the case is with investigators and the district attorney. Worth letting that play out before anyone draws hard conclusions.

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