Last week, Nevada Carry had the pleasure of speaking with
the residents of the Siena Community Association in the southwest of the Las
Vegas Valley. Instructor Mac McAllister of Blue and Gold Firearms Training and I
went on a little bit about gun rights and self-defense in and outside the home.
Well, Mac went on for a little bit. Me on the other hand…I went on a lot. Let’s
just say there is a reason I prefer to write. Anyhow, the crowd was very polite
and receptive. Plus the lovely Activities Manager, Chelsee, didn’t cut off my
microphone.
Siena residents have been concerned lately with a spike in
burglaries and home invasions in the areas. Prefacing our discussion of firearms,
Officer Bella Scholes of the LVMPD discussed some very important tips to keep
intruders out to begin with. Sadly, I felt a palpable sensation of fear from
the crowd. Some residents quite frankly seemed terrified at the prospects of
crime. What I tried to relate was that while wariness is appropriate, fear is
not. I reminded everyone that for the most part, life in an upper middle class
neighborhood is pretty safe. Officer Scholes pointed out that the vast majority
of violent home invasions are targeted to homes known to have large amounts of
cash or drugs. Gang violence, not a direct threat to most citizens, is also
another driver of crime.
Too often, we fear the unknown. Most of us like predictable
outcomes. Uncertainty bothers us. The thought of an empty house being cased by
burglars is unsettling, when in reality, no one is watching, not even your
neighbors staring absent-mindedly out the window. Stories in newspapers and
especially on TV (the latter often being sensationalized) paint an inaccurate
picture. The same goes for pins on a crime map. What house was targeted? Why?
Most of us have had pretty sedate lives. In my private life,
the only time I’ve been a victim of a violent crime was when I was robbed at
gun point when the fast food joint I worked at in high school was held up. For
most Americans, violence is an exception, not the norm. That isn’t always the
same in rural or impoverished communities. Elderly folks tend to be weaker, due
to age, and viewed as ‘easy prey’ by criminals. That’s why a firearm in the
hands of a trained and confident senior citizen is an equalizing force. While a
young man such as myself could take a beating, I know my grandmother could not
survive what would likely be a non-fatal battery to me.
Buying guns and taking physical security measures aren’t acts
of desperation or a harbinger of a future needs for those things. Having a gun
the home won’t cause a burglary any more than owning a fire extinguisher and
smoke alarms will cause your house to burst into flames. Guns are for the
worst-case scenario; it’s better to have it and
not need it than to need it and not
have it. Along with that is confidence. A gun in your closet doesn’t magically
keep burglars away. A good example is sticking a fake security camera or an
alarm system sign in your front yard; let’s hope no one calls your bluff.
Physical security measures do work. Lighting your perimeter denies criminals a place to hide
and allows for easier identification. Security cameras can alert you or
document evidence for the police. Planting cactus and other painful plants keep
people from coming over the wall or at least making them regret they jumped. A
hard-target home isn’t going to necessarily make you invincible. The same goes
for open carry; “I’m not an easy target. Go elsewhere.” It sounds cruel, as I
told one woman, but you really do want them to go to the neighbor’s house.
Despite all these measures, someone can still get in, if
they are determined or stupid enough. At that point, all you can do is fight
back. We discussed running into another room, shouting “I have a gun,” and
firing warning shots. Nevada has no duty to retreat or to give a warning before
using deadly force. If someone is breaking into your house for the purpose of
offering you or your loved ones physical violence, you can legally shoot them.
Read the actual laws on the Self-Defense page
and talk to an instructor for more details.
Of course, the whole idea is to avoid the encounter in the
first place. Call 911 at the first sign of trouble. Keep your doors or cars
locked. Generally, it’s preferable to get your family to a locked room and arm
yourself. Let the police clear the house, but you have the right to do it
yourself and the right to shoot instead of run away. What do to in a given set
of circumstances is impossible to predict beforehand, but if you can reasonably
mitigate the outcome away from a shooting, try it, but not at the risk of your
life. While civil immunity exists for true self-defense shootings, if you made
a mistake, the legal process is a nightmare. Plus, good people tend to feel
guilty for taking a life, even when justified.
Las Vegas Metro PD has community policing units that will
perform home security evaluations as do most large law enforcement agencies.
Even the smaller departments will likely have an officer or a deputy who is
happy to talk to you about what you can improve and what is going on in your
community. Take advantage of police outreach programs and citizen academies.
It’s a wonderful chance to see through the eyes of a cop and really see what
goes on in your neighborhood that you don’t see.
To Nevadans and the residents of Siena, don’t be afraid. Be
smart, be watchful, and be confident because you took the steps to harden your
home and defend yourself. Make it easier on the police by helping them before
and after the fact. If they don’t have to show up at all, ever, that’s great!
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