Myers, who says he’s a licensed security guard, was sitting in his car Wednesday to conduct “overwatch” while his son trains because “he has seen numerous crimes occur” in the parking lot, according to the probable cause statement.

The surveillance footage shows Myers approach the teens with a gun in his hand, point it directly at them and then move quickly toward them, police said. One of the boys pulls a BB gun out of his pocket, lays it on the ground and extends his arms out as if to show he has nothing in his hands, police said in the document.

“Immediately after … it is clear that he has been shot because he abruptly jerks his body away from Myers and falls to the ground,” the document says.

  • @[email protected]
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    675 months ago

    well-intentioned

    No. The article says

    conduct “overwatch”

    Meaning off the clock surveillance, for the purpose of engaging in vigilantism.

    • @jpreston2005
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      225 months ago

      I meant that, in his mind, he had “good intentions.” That’s where the distinction comes in, as everyone walking around with a gun, is really just waiting for their moment to “save the day.” And when you go looking for something, odds are you’ll find it. And by that I mean that they’ll assume whatever scenario their in IS their moment to “save the day,” as they ultimately ignore contrary evidence and push aside any doubts as to the situations innocence, because they want so badly to be seen as a hero that saved the day.

      Dude decided to play cowboy, found himself a situation in which he saw two teenagers with what looked like weapons, ignored the fact that they weren’t attempting to conceal themselves or their “weapons,” ignored their body language and demeanor, ignored his doubts, and killed somebodys child. And that, ultimately, is going to be the fate of most people who walk around with guns, you’re going to end up hurting someone close to you, or someone entirely innocent, and then you’ll spend the rest of your life unable to sleep or rest because you decided deadly force was necessary when it absolutely wasn’t.

      • @Katana314
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        35 months ago

        A story I’m writing has this as a point. The characters fuss over the trolley problem (renamed in the story), with divisive answers about not getting involved, etc.

        The protagonist’s answer to the trolley problem is: To fear it, agonize over it, and not prepare an answer for when it comes. Basically, don’t pre-engineer scenarios in your mind that you’re “ready” to make some fatal, definitive solution for - because probably the biggest issue with the trolley problem is working out every last detail to verify with 100.0000% certainty that you are in a trolley problem with no other solutions.

        • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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          5 months ago

          I just want to step in here and say: you’re arguing over the dumbest thing. Stop trying to pick a fight when you agree with the overall sentiment of what they’re trying to say.

          • @[email protected]
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            45 months ago

            It’s not dumb to call out apologetic framing in commentary. This dude doesn’t need kid gloves, and what other people like him need is a very clear description of what’s right and wrong here. This isn’t a grey area. If you go out and use your personal firearm to police other people, you are a vigilante. If you don’t think you are engaging in vigilantism, you are delusional.

            Main stream news should be responsible enough to call a spade a spade in these cases.

            • @jpreston2005
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              35 months ago

              The guy saw people with what looked like guns going towards a shopping center that contained, among others, his child in a karate class. If the situation had been real, then his actions could have potentially saved lives, which is what his intention obviously was. I said that phrase specifically to evoke in the readers mind, how they have similarly been well-intentioned in the past, but the situation turned out doing harm. We’ve all had instances where we tried to do something good, and it turned out bad. This guy tried to be a hero, and instead he’s the villain. Calling him well-intentioned isn’t “apologetic framing,” it’s what happened. And it should serve as a stark reminder to everyone still walking around with guns, that their good intentions mean absolutely nothing.

              • @[email protected]
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                25 months ago

                The situation of returning guns to a gun store?

                He intended to confront other people open carrying while he was openly carrying.

                This same mindset, you could describe cross burnings or working at the DMV as well intentioned.

                • @[email protected]
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                  5 months ago

                  I feel like you’re being deliberately obtuse, or just trying to be adversarial for the sake of it. His point is that what was going on in the asshole’s head was that he was stopping an active shooter situation. He thought that because he was a moron. Had he not had a gun, the moron couldn’t have murdered people.

                  There’s always going to morons, so the problem here is that he was allowed to have a gun. Unless your position is that morons should be euthanized, then you must agree that the solution is gun control, or that morons murdering indiscriminately is 👍

                  • @[email protected]
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                    05 months ago

                    For a bunch of types of people, good intentions legitimise behavior. It wasn’t legitimate behavior.

                    Gun control absolutely needs to happen. Until it does, news and discussions should center around decrying vigilante behavior.

                    It doesn’t matter what he thought. It matters what he did.