From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/071800/met_3568307.html

Mostly a good article.  Too bad it doesn't mention
research by Kleck, Lott, etc., showing that defensive 
gun uses vastly outnumber gun crimes.

Have gun, will not fear it anymore

                 By Paul Pinkham 
                 Times-Union staff writer 

Bleeding and weakened from the bullet wound in her
chest, Susan Gonzalez aimed her husband's
.22-caliber pistol, the one she hated, and emptied it
into one of the robbers who had burst through the
front door of her rural Jacksonville home.

Those shots ended the life of one robber, led to a life
prison term for another and became an epiphany for
Gonzalez, a 41-year-old mother of five who runs a
photography studio.

Gonzalez had always feared guns, never wanted a
gun and argued with her husband, Mike, to please not
keep guns in their home.

"I hated guns, all of them," she said. "I was that
scared of them that I didn't want them around."

That all changed that terror-filled night nearly three
years ago when Susan Gonzalez fought for her life
inside her family's home near Jacksonville
International Airport.

She and her husband, 43, no longer argue about guns,
and she goes almost nowhere without her holstered
Taurus .38 Special. She sits with it while watching
television and takes it outside to do yardwork.

She joined advocacy groups such as Women Against Gun 
Control and the Second Amendment Sisters.

And she became a vocal opponent of gun control,
traveling to Washington in May to meet with President
Clinton and counter-organizers of the Million Mom
March, which organized a huge Mother's Day rally to
support gun control legislation. She recently taped a
segment scheduled to air on ABC-TV's 20/20 in the
fall. And this month, she was filmed by a British TV
crew for a documentary on Americans and guns.

Gonzalez's story is naturally compelling because she
was anti-gun and because she successfully defended
herself against an armed intruder after being shot
herself, said Janalee Tobias, founder and president of 
Women Against Gun Control.

"She actually fired a gun," Tobias said. In most cases
where potential victims protect themselves, Tobias
said, a person is able to scare off  an intruder simply
by displaying a weapon.

Gonzalez never imagined herself advocating gun owners'
rights. She still weeps at the memory of taking a man's
life.

"I live every day knowing I had to shoot that boy,"
she said.

But she said she thinks it's important that stories
like hers get told.

"Two and a half years ago I felt just like all them
other women [at the Million Mom March]," she said. "You
hear about criminals with guns, and you hear about kids
committing suicide with guns, but you never hear about
the self-defense aspect."

'I knew I was dead'

The 42 bullet holes police counted in the Gonzalez
home the morning of Aug. 2, 1997, are stark evidence
of the sheer terror the couple endured on the night 
that changed their lives.

The night seemed to be winding down as any other. While
Mike Gonzalez slept, his wife sat on the couch watching
television and waiting for their 18-year-old
son to arrive home from a friend's house, where he
had been playing video games.

Susan Gonzalez remembers hearing the doorknob jiggle
about 12:40 a.m. She thought to herself as she walked
toward the door, "Wow, he's early."

Suddenly the door flew open and two masked men burst
into the doublewide wearing gloves and camouflage jackets
and waving guns. One of them ordered Susan Gonzalez to
lie down, but she ran. He chased her back to the master
bedroom, where she woke her husband and tried to hold
the door shut. She was shot in the chest.

"It burned like a fire going through me," she said. 

As her husband, 43, wrestled with the two robbers in
the living room, Susan Gonzalez dialed 911, told the
operator they were being shot, gave her address
and hung up. She then grabbed her husband's Ruger .22 
rom a drawer in the headboard and, fearing she would hit
her husband by mistake, fired several
hots over the robbers' heads to scare them off.

It didn't work.

"One came towards me firing, and I ran," she said.
"After running to my bedroom, the intruder didn't follow
me all the way . . . because he now knew I had a gun also."

She peered out from her bedroom doorway and saw one
of the gunmen, Raymond Waters Jr., crouched near her
refrigerator. She crept along the wall, sneaked up behind
him and emptied the Ruger, hitting him twice with her
seven or eight remaining bullets. The other gunman,
Robert Walls, then shot Susan Gonzalez, now out of
ammunition, as she retreated to the bedroom again.

"I was standing in my closet asking for forgiveness of
my sins, because I knew I was dead," she recalled.

Reality sets in

Walls fled from the house but returned when he found
the robbers' getaway driver had left. He put a gun to
Susan Gonzalez's head ad demanded the keys to the
couple's truck. As he sped off, the truck ran over
Waters, who had staggered outside.

Walls, 24, is serving five life prison terms for
second-degree felony murder, armed robbery, armed
burglary and two counts of attempted first-degree
murder. Louie T. Wright, 27, the getaway driver,
pleaded guilty to robbery and was sentenced to five
years.

Susan and Mike Gonzalez, each shot twice during the
gunbattle, were treated at area hospitals. She required
lung surgery. His injuries were less serious, and he
went home in three days.

Nancy Hwa, a spokeswoman for the Center to Prevent
Handgun Violence, was reluctant to criticize Gonzalez.

"Every incident is different," she said. "In this
particular case, she certainly was justified using
whatever means necessary to defend herself."

But the compelling story obscures the fact that
"incidences like Ms. Gonzalez's are very rare," Hwa said,
citing statistics that show firearms are far less likely
to be used in self-defense than in suicides, accidental
shootings or homicides involving members of the same
household. And, she said, the center believes
having a handgun escalates the potential for violence.
"People have to weigh the risk of losing a TV, jewelry or
whatever vs. losing their life," Hwa said.
The statistics don't matter to Susan Gonzalez. "Reality set
in when I was shot," she said, "to the point where I realized
why my husband and others had guns for self-defense."

Living in fear

In April, Mike and Susan Gonzalez traveled to New York to
be interviewed for a TV talk show pilot with 20/20's John
Stossel. It was the first time since the robbery she had
been without her gun for any significant length of time, and, 
as she and her husband dined at a steakhouse, she got scared
about walking back to their hotel.

 "I told my husband, 'Take one of their steak knives,'" she
said.

At home, they live behind burglar bars. The doors and
windows are alwayslocked. And there's the ever-present pistol.

"That's sad to have to live that way, but it's the only way
I can feel comfortable," Susan Gonzalez said.

Her fears were only heightened when she and her husband
were crime victims again in March. Burglars used an ax 
rom their shed to break down the burglar bars on the back
door while they weren't home. Among the items stolen -- the
Ruger .22 she used to shoot Waters.

Police are still recovering weapons taken in the burglary
-- a 9mm turned up in Virginia last week -- but the Ruger
remains missing. 

As a mother of five, all now grown, Susan Gonzalez said she
understands the gun control lobby's concerns about children
getting access to guns. She questions some positions taken
by the National Rifle Association. Neither she nor her
husband are members.

"I think they're a little over-the-top, but I think . . .
they're doing it [because] they're afraid once it starts,
then it's not going to stop," she said, referring to
legislation limiting gun owners' rights. "They're trying
to preserve Second Amendment rights." 

She said she believes in gun locks or unloading weapons
that aren't being used.
But she also believes people should have the right to
keep an unlocked gun close by to protect themselves --
like she did.

"I feel I have the right to self-defense," she said, "and
I feel that other people do, too."


Cybershooters website: http://www.cybershooters.org

List admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___________________________________________________________
T O P I C A  The Email You Want. http://www.topica.com/t/16
Newsletters, Tips and Discussions on Your Favorite Topics

Reply via email to