Author: Dave Hardin

  • Wednesday morning feel good stories

    From AURORA, Colorado;

    Well, the incident started off with a feel good ending.

    A police officer is on paid administrative leave after he shot and killed a homeowner, right after that man shot and killed an intruder in his home.  Police responded to reports of an intruder early Monday morning. When officers arrived, they heard gunfire. They confronted a man armed with a gun, and an officer shot and killed him.

    The armed man was actually the homeowner who had just killed the intruder.

    Officials say the intruder was found dead on the bathroom floor.

    I guess if you kill someone that breaks into your house you probably should not greet the Police with a gun in your hand.

    From CENTREVILLE, VA

    A homeowner shot and injured someone he suspected of being a burglar Monday morning in the 6300 block of Fairfax National Way, according to Fairfax County Police. The suspected burglar was hit twice and is being treated at a nearby hospital for injuries not considered life threatening.  Around 5 a.m., police responded to a reported burglary. The homeowner said he saw a man in his backyard, confronted him near the front porch and then fired several shots.

    UPDATE: The intruder, identified Tuesday as Ethan Redd, 29, of Chantilly, has been charged with unlawful entry.

    From Milwaukee, WI

    Now here is one that becomes a pain in the ass.

    FOX 6 reports that the 21-year-old suspect attacked the 33-year-old man—later identified as Thomas Chojnacki—from behind he was leaving on a bicycle on Thursday evening. Surveillance footage shows the suspect run up and take Chojnacki down to the ground. Chojnacki later said the suspect was trying to take his gun.

    “He was determined to get that gun. I know if he got the gun, he would have killed me without a second thought,” Chojnacki told TMJ4.  A physical struggle ensues, with the suspect eventually running off. Chojnacki chases after him off camera. After about 15 seconds, Chojnacki returns to his bike. The suspect then comes running towards him, at which point Chojnacki pulls a gun from a holster and aims it at him. The suspect paces around the gas station parking lot while Chojnacki keeps the gun aimed at him.

    When the suspect gets closer to Chojnacki’s bike, Chojnacki hits him in the back of the head with his gun, which prompts the suspect to pick something up off the ground and start running. That’s when Chojnacki opens fire and shoots the suspect in the butt.

    Police arrived and took the suspect to a hospital. He is expected to recover from his injury. Chojnacki, meanwhile, was interviewed by police in the aftermath of the shooting. It has been confirmed that he is a valid concealed carry permit holder.

    “I didn’t have no time to think. he just kept coming and my adrenaline was pumping,” Chojnacki later said.

    After reviewing the surveillance footage and the available evidence at the scene, police arrested and charged Chojnacki with reckless endangerment. Milwaukee police say criminal charges are also pending for the suspect.

     

  • “I thought you were bigger”

    A story by  Brendan O’Byrne first published in The War Horse

    This article is well written, I hope you find it worth a read.

    A small line of people formed in front of the stage. Some of them offered a handshake or a thank you, a few wanted to tell me a story about their own experience, and others asked a question or two.

    Light blue specks of splattered paint polka-dotted her faded jeans. She wore a light-colored fleece and thick-framed reading glasses. She had aged kindly. The corners of her eyes and mouth wrinkled to show years of smiles and laughter. It seemed like some of those small lines were damp. Gray streaks highlighted her black hair.

    She carried a copy of “War,” by Sebastian Junger, with my face on the cover staring out at nothing. She’d tucked the book under her arm to keep both her hands free to grasp mine.

    “I just wanted to thank you for your service and your honesty up there on stage today,” she said as she took my hand with both of hers while maintaining direct eye contact. She wore a small, sad smile and didn’t blink. “The fighting you boys did for … us … .” Her voice trailed off as she tried to find words. “Well, no one should have to go through what you and your friends did.”

    It humbled me into awkwardness for my experience to be honored by my elders. I quickly thanked her as I studied my dress shoes. I may have even told her it wasn’t so bad out there, just to make her feel better. I was aware that she was old enough to have possibly said the same words 50 years earlier to an entirely different group of returning veterans, maybe even to the man standing beside her.

    “It would be an honor if you could sign this,” she said, releasing my hands and untucking the copy of Battle Company 2-503rd’s story.

    She made small talk about my speech and said she’d watched the documentary, “Restrepo,” as I signed my name underneath the big block letters of WAR.

    “I have to admit, from the movie, I thought you’d be bigger,” she added.

    I finished signing the book and handed it back while thinking of how to respond. Her kind eyes told me no harm was intended. It was just an observation, yet I wanted to defend myself.

    I wanted to tell her that the bigger the guy, the bigger the target. I wanted to tell her how the men who could walk like goats through the Hindu Kush mountains with 100 pounds on their backs were shorter than her, which I guessed to be just a few inches over five feet. I bit my tongue when I began to tell her that “Restrepo” wasn’t a movie and there were no actors cast for the part.

    My emotions in check, I told her that most of the men I had served with were no bigger than me. I added, politely, that the legendary Spartans averaged five-foot-six.”

    With more people in line behind her, we said our quick goodbyes.

    But her observation bugged me the rest of the day, and I couldn’t understand why. It bugged me so much that I began my next speech by asking the audience, “By a show of hands, who thought I would be bigger?”

    Between the chuckles, dozens of hands raised. I laughed with them.

    Around this time, 2013, I was speaking regularly around the country about my combat deployment and the journey back home to a range of people: veterans, college students, mental health professionals, and anyone else who would listen.

    After the encounter with the woman, I began each speech with that question and received the same response.

    At the end of each speech, the little line formed with the same kind of questions and the same kind of praise, “Your friends and you are our country’s heroes.” Or something very similar.

    The almost universal reactions, observations, and questions from the audiences exposed a misconception in our country about veterans, and more broadly, about how we define “hero.” It wasn’t just the audiences that were confused about veterans and heroes. I was, too.

    I had strong mixed emotions about what service to my country meant to me. I served six years in the Army, and in May 2007, I deployed with the 173rd Airborne Brigade to the Korengal Valley, Afghanistan, for 15 months. I lived those long, hard months with my own well-being and needs second to those of the group. That is the mentality in combat; it is always “we.”

    I was and am proud that I served honorably.

    Yet, at the end of our deployment when a Bronze Star was given to all the men who had served the full 15 months, to all the men I had fought alongside for 15 months, I was given a lesser award. An Army Commendation Medal. There was no explanation why. I have repeatedly asked my former leaders for a reason, but the closest thing to an answer cast blame on Army bureaucracy.

    I didn’t care about the award itself, I cared about what the award represented: the Army recognizing the sacrifices and honoring the job we did. I was there doing the same job and sacrificing the same as everyone else, but when the Army recognized me with a lesser award, it effectively told me that my service wasn’t equal to theirs.

    It shattered my idea of what my service meant to me and to the Army I’d fought for. I felt betrayed, making my last few months of service more miserable than any war could.

    I left the military in December 2008 with an honorable discharge and a lot of questions about what my service meant to me, the Army, and my country. It helped me to see that the crowds I spoke to were filled with a lot of the same kind of questions.

    A couple of years after finding out I was too small to be me, I was living on the eastern edge of the U.S.A. in Provincetown, Cape Cod. The small coastal town, as old as America’s story, was port for the Mayflower before the ship continued west to mainland Plymouth, Massachusetts.

    Nowadays, visitors come to Provincetown by road rather than by sea. Provincetown is at the end of the 60-mile-long island, which draws two distinct types of people to the small town by the sea: ones who are incredibly lost or ones who have made the choice to be at the terminal point of a 60-mile island.

    I was both as I dealt with a failed marriage, coped with the death of my father who’d died a year after my return from war, and tried to get a handle on a crippling alcohol problem, all while trying to find meaning in my now peaceful life. With combat’s constant deadly threat, to be alive and keep each other alive is meaning enough. Without that pressure, meaning became harder to define.

    While living in Provincetown and dealing with those issues, I continued to search how best to honor my military service, which had become harder to do as I struggled to reconcile being called a hero by the public, knowing what the Army thought of my service. I didn’t know who was right or if they were both wrong.

    I was living illegally inside of an old, bare building that had been a ship-refitting wharf until a bunch of returning World War I veterans who wanted to make art and hang out with each other bought it and turned it into an artist club.

    They’d hardly changed the inside of the building, besides adding a huge fireplace, some long dinner tables, and a pool and billiards table. Nearly 100 years later when I lived there, the walls still hadn’t been insulated.

    During the winter, it became so cold in the building that the top layer of the toilet water froze; I kept a stick next to the toilet to break the ice in order to go to the bathroom. I was given a studio with free room and board in return for taking care of the place and cleaning up the weekly dinner that had been eaten every Saturday since 1916.

    I slept in the studio’s loft on a worn mattress. From my window, I had a view of the harbor and the boats moored in it. I tried to create beautiful things from chunks of wood and stone; I sculpted the moored boats, figures of nude women, and primitive wooden clubs. It is the most healing place I have ever lived.

    I also spent a lot of time on my leaky 25-foot fiberglass sailboat, The Irish Mist. When I lay in the boat’s damp cabin bed, rolling on the protected harbor’s swells, I felt so far from the country I had fought for and the questions about my service and honor, and so far from the feeling that my country and I didn’t know what the word hero actually meant.

    My Provincetown P.O. box had a surprise waiting in early 2015, when the town was dead and there was hardly any news at all besides the howling winds of approaching nor’easters.

    The letter was from Cape Cod’s American Red Cross. Eight years separated the last time I had received a Red Cross message. The previous message found me at the tail end of a fighting season in the Korengal in October 2007, informing me that my younger sister was seriously hurt and that I needed to come home to possibly say my goodbye.

    Eight years later, a dread washed over me as I opened the letter in the post office lobby. Luckily, the envelope contained no threat of possible goodbyes; rather, it shocked me to find a note congratulating me that I would be honored by Cape Cod’s Red Cross as a “Local Veteran Hero.”

    I received the news with trepidation.

    Before I could accept it, I needed to know what they were giving me the award for. If it was for my military service, I didn’t want it. Not that it wouldn’t have been an honor; it would’ve been. But it would have come from the wrong people. The Army should have honored and recognized my service to the country. I hadn’t reconciled those mixed feelings when the Red Cross letter came in the mail, but by that point I no longer wanted any award for the violence of war.

    The Red Cross award started unraveling years of confusion for me about why being called a hero for my service hurt instead of feeling good. That woman with the book tucked under her arm, and all the ones who followed her, the audiences, and the country in general had a perception of me and my service. They thought I should be bigger, and they thought what I did overseas had made me a hero. On the other side of the spectrum was the Army, to whom I was just another number.

    But to the local Red Cross, and my community, I was more. Through phone calls and emails with a Red Cross representative, I was relieved to learn they didn’t want to honor my military service directly. Instead, they wanted to honor my honest speeches about war and homecoming, the volunteer work I’d done with returning veterans, and the peace I worked toward in myself and my community.

    The award helped me clarify what a real veteran hero looks like and what it takes to become one. Serving honorably during combat, I’ve come to believe, is only the beginning. The next step starts when you return home, bringing with you the lessons you learned. In war, I learned that the most human thing we can do is put our own needs, wants, and ego second to the community we live in.

    The fallen in war have learned combat’s most profound lesson, and their deathly silence demands that we learn the cost of war. The living have valuable lessons about war’s toll as well, though, and I’ve hardly been asked about mine.

    It finally clicked as I was writing my speech for the award ceremony that I hadn’t served the Army; I had served my country, the United States of America. To honor my own contribution, I’ve started taking my own advice and reminding myself that my service isn’t over yet. What I have learned is that I don’t want to be recognized and honored only for my contribution in war.

    We veterans have so much more to give and teach our country than just what we did overseas.

    To honor our service, civilians who haven’t served need to ask what we’ve learned, and veterans need to speak.

  • Shon Wilson; Special kinda guy

    Shon Wilson; Special kinda guy

    Our friends over at the Guardians of the Green Beret posted their case on Shon Wilson.  It seems he was testifying as a Weapons Expert of some sort. Maybe some of you want to take a crack at what the guy is qualified to testify about.  Let me give fair warning, there are puppies being trained and he knows what “is” and what “is not” a bomb.  I started with some of his claims:

    Ok boys and girls I have a suggestion for you.   If you are in need of legal representation and they hire someone with that kind of resume,  you should probably seek new representation, but that is just my humble opinion.  Lets see what else this trained killer is qualified to do:

    I realize lawyers are not exactly the brightest crayons in the box, (except ours of course, I think he fancies fuchsia) but who is gullible enough to think the idiot who wrote that is an expert in much of anything?  I suspect the only thing this clown ran into that was  foreign and high-density occurred while he was burning shitters. Come on, seriously?

    Why is there always a puppy involved?  But at least he has ribbons and medals and badges, oh my!

    I just love commemorative awards, I didn’t realize they qualified me as an expert in anything other than “Online Ordering”.  Hey now,  there are some real ones mixed in.  Let’s see how “Operator” this warrior looks:

    Oh my goodness, we all know that clown we deployed with who had to take Tac-Tee-Kool photo ops.  He looks outside the wire, hahahahahahahaha.  I guess this nonsense plays to civilians.

    Seriously, you are going to have to go over to the Guardians of the Green Beret and attempt some explanation of his records.  They have 40 some pictures of evidence to go through.

    Is the Unit Clerk Course now part of Special Forces training?  Anyway, he has prior service and lots of records to comb through.  Search as I may…I can’t find any Special Forces Weapons Expert stuff.   But, maybe I missed it all.  I am getting the opinion that maybe he is an embellishing clown who just couldn’t be proud of what he actually did do.  I think he should just man up and stop bothering puppies.

     

     

     

  • Marines lead all services in binge drinking, sex partners

    Marines lead all services in binge drinking, sex partners

    I realize this might be shocking news to some, but I don’t make this stuff up.  The Rand Corp Study has some very interesting findings.  It seems the Marines have continued their dominion of the Debauchery Ball with only half of the Marine Corps drinking at alcoholic levels.  I take exception to part of the study, they need to define Binge in military terms.

    The Corps lost to the Navy for the highest overall percentage of LGBT personnel and of gay or bisexual men serving, but the Marine Corps recovered with the highest percentage of lesbian or bisexual women serving.  Nearly half of service members reported aggressive behavior in the past month, and the other half were probably in the Air Force.  In addition, 8.4 percent reported aggressive behavior five or more times in the past month which is consistent with the percentage of service members in the Corps and Rangers.  The Army just needs to step up their game in general.  I call BS on the Coast Guard numbers across the board.  It was my experience that Coast Guardettes were, well, they really looked good in uniform.  When it comes to multiple sex partners I can attest to several Guardettes being more than capable and they deserve to be recognized.

    Some stereotypes are founded in factual data…just sayin.  We need to conduct some studies of  ‘You People’ here at TAH.  Maybe we can provide these folks with meaningful data.  Anyway, read the entire study yourself and come to some more appropriate conclusions if you dare.

     

     

     

  • Tuesday morning feel good stories

    From Queens, NY 

    Two brothers who woke up to an intruder in their home took matters into their own hands Monday morning, beating the suspected burglar with a baseball bat and stabbing him to death, police said.

    A 26-year-old man allegedly broke into a house around 2:45 a.m. Monday in the St. Albans neighborhood of Queens when he encountered the two brothers, ages 16 and 27, FOX5NYreported.

    At least one of the men reportedly confronted the man, hit him with a baseball bat and stabbed him. It was unclear if one or both brothers were involved in the incident.

    The homeowner, who did not want to be identified, told ABC15 two armed guys stormed in on Saturday.  “I never ever saw these guys before yesterday,” he said.

    The man believes the intruders were looking for money.  “The instigator…he puts a gun to my head and says (it’s) a good day to die, isn’t it?” the man said. The homeowner says he decided to fight back.  “They immediately panicked,” he said. “They didn’t think I was going to resist at all. They underestimated me.”

    At one point, the homeowner says he managed to wrestle away one of the intruder’s guns and shot him.

    “I gave as good as I got to both of them,” he said. “They’re both taller than me, half my age and they had loaded weapons in my home that they brought, and I shot and killed a man with his own gun.”

    The homeowner says the other man, and a woman who was with them escaped out a window.  The Pinal County Sheriff’s Office hasn’t confirmed whose gun the homeowner used, nor provided a motive for the break-in.  Officials say they are now searching for 34-year-old Aaron Nicholas Ryan and 36-year-old Rachel Faye Ryan in connection with the home invasion.

    According to the arrest affidavit, the homeowner was in his office when he heard the alarm go off on his security system. The homeowner said he went to the living room and saw that the door to the garage was open, but thought it was simply blown open by the wind.

    Moments later, he told police that he heard the alarm go off again and ran back to see the door handle begin to twist.

    The homeowner said that he locked the door, grabbed his gun and opened the garage door. At that point, he said that he saw a man run out of the back of the garage into his back yard.

    The affidavit states that the victim followed the alleged suspect, identified as 44-year-old Jared Bennett, and held him at gunpoint.

    When they were in front of the house, the affidavit states that Bennett “began to rise up on his hands,” which is when the homeowner “accidentally fired one round into the grass away from [Bennett.]”

  • Scott Cutright; Fake Navy SEAL with identity crisis.

    Scott Cutright; Fake Navy SEAL with identity crisis.

    The fine people over at militaryphony.com have published a case on a Scott William Cutright.  It seems “Knotright” Cutright can’t make up his mind about what he did while in the military.

    Scott William Cutright comes to us from League, TX.  Military phonies became aware of Scott’s claims of being a homeless Navy SEAL Officer.  After a simple search of Scott Cutright we found dozens and dozens of money requests and numerous conflicting posts.  In some posts he claims to be a Navy SEAL then others he was not a SEAL.  Other claims of being a Mustang (Navy term for prior enlisted that receives his/her commission) with two Purple Hearts. 

    He claims that some Ring Knockers were picking on him because he was prior enlisted.

    His claims about military service are all over the place.  He is, he is not, he was, he might be, you will have to go over to militaryphony.com to read all the different claims.  Here are some highlights:

    This clown goes on ad nauseam.  Plus, he is a real tough guy.

    Ok, he throws in some PTSD and Purple Hearts and bada boom bada bing…he is a war hero.   Well, maybe not.  A few real Navy SEAL types over at MP had no idea who this guy was, so they ordered his records through a Freedom of Information request.   You will never guess what they found.

    Hey, he almost made it two years.  But I don’t think he was doing any super secret SEAL stuff while he was in the Brig.  Navy seems to think he skyrocketed to E-1, which is just a pay grade or 12 under a LtCmdr.  Shocking…I know.  Since he is obviously confused about his role in protecting our fine country, we are glad we could help clear it up for him.  Who knows how many different accounts he has asking for money out there.

  • Defense Secretary Mattis sending personnel to North Korea

    Defense Secretary Mattis sending personnel to North Korea


    I have seen that look before…something is about to get done.

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. military is “absolutely” considering the possibility of sending personnel to North Korea for the first time in more than a decade to search for additional remains of U.S. troops from the Korean war, U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said on Friday.

    I ponder several things right off the bat:

    What kind of hysterical hyperbole will the Loony Left come up with to spin a dark side to this?  Is President Trump colluding with Rocket Man to build Time Shares?

    How much would we be  paying for the return of our fallen if  Whats her Name  was running things?  If  That Other Guy sent billions to Iran for…sorry it slips my mind what we paid for, how much would that crowd be willing to pay these days?  Maybe its just me, but it seems all of this winning is taking a toll on Certain People.

    Like him or hate him,  its becoming impossible to not acknowledge the man for accomplishing an awful lot in a short time.  Maybe his button really is bigger…I mean, look at those hands.

     

     

  • Monday morning feel good stories.

    Monday morning feel good stories.

    From Apache Junction, AZ

    According to Pinal County Sheriff’s Office, two armed suspects entered a home near US 60 and Tomahawk Road Saturday around 11 a.m. The homeowner struggled with one of the suspects, shooting him. Detectives believe the second suspect took off in a dark-colored car.

    The shot suspect was pronounced dead at a local hospital, PCSO said.

     

    From Phoenix, AZ

    Phoenix police are investigating a shooting at a home near 19th Avenue and Indian School Road that left one man in critical condition.

    The shooting occurred at about 3:40 a.m. Sunday morning.  According to Sgt. Armando Carbajal, when officers arrived on scene, they found one man who had suffered a gunshot wound.  He was taken to a local hospital where he remains in critical condition.

    Carbajal said police are still searching for a suspect.

    From Huston, TX 

    A would-be robber, according to Houston police, was fatally shot after he tried to run away with a money bag he wrestled from an armored truck guard.  “There was a confrontation, if you want to call it, a fight over the money bag,” said HPD Sgt. Robert Ruiz. “A wrestling match, but the suspect did manage to get the bag away from the security guard is the information we’re collecting at this point.”

    A Starbucks had to close for several hours,  oh the humanity of it all.