1
   

It Happened Again :

 
 
Reply Sat 9 Sep, 2006 08:20 am
It Happened Again :

A pistol-packing Harlem granny turned the tables on a robber
yesterday, busting out her registered .357 magnum and shooting the
mugger in the elbow - while riding in her motorized scooter, cops said.

Feisty Margaret Johnson, 57, who has a dislocated hip and a herniated
disk, was heading out for target practice about 3 p.m. when a career
criminal came up behind her and went for her necklaces, sources said.

"There's not much to it," she said later. "Somebody tried to mug me,
and I shot him."

The thief "walked past her, and came around and choked her," said
Johnson's pal, Lynnell Bunce, 40. "He was going for her jewelry, and
he got it. He didn't say anything - until she shot him."

Then the man cursed and fled from the scene outside 470 Lenox Ave.,
where the victim has lived for decades, Bunce said.

"I'm very tired. It was very scary," Johnson said as she later
entered her building in her three-wheeled scooter with scratches on
her neck and left hand. "I've had a very long day."

Police followed the trail of the wounded man's blood to a McDonald's
restaurant not far from Johnson's building and arrested 45-year-old
Deron Johnson, an ex-con with nine robbery arrests who is no relation
to the victim, sources said.

He was in stable condition at Harlem Hospital last night, and charges
were pending against him. The jewelry was recovered, officials said.

Margaret Johnson has a premises permit for the gun, a police source
said, meaning she is allowed to keep the pistol in her home and
transport it to a firing range.

Bunce said her friend, who has a grown son and at least one
grandchild, got the permit when she was a bus driver for the city.

Neighbors said Johnson, a granddaughter of a famed Harlem gangster,
the late Ellsworth (Bumpy) Johnson, is a well-known and well-liked woman.

"Everyone loves Margaret," Bunce said. "Margaret is funny. She's like
clockwork. She's lived here forever, and she walks her dog four times
a day and says hello to everybody."

"She's spunky," said Toi Frederick, 26, a lawyer who lives in the
same building. "I wouldn't think she would be someone who would just
lay down and give up her stuff."

Bunce said she walked outside after hearing a commotion and saw her
friend sitting in her scooter. "I saw her in the chair, and she was
in a state of shock. I said, 'Margaret, do you need me?' She said,
'Yes,' and I said, 'Well, Margaret, let's go.' "

The pair went to the 32nd Precinct police station, where Johnson told
cops her dramatic story.


Sadly for the rest of New York,
the criminal survived his wound;
well, maybe next time.

David
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boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Sat 9 Sep, 2006 08:47 am
Anyone can be tough if they have a gun but this chick, man, she is tough:

Quote:
Nurse, 51, strangles intruder in her home
Self-defense - Susan Kuhnhausen wins a deadly struggle against a convicted felon armed with a hammer
Friday, September 08, 2006
MAXINE BERNSTEIN
An emergency room nurse who arrived home Wednesday night to find a strange man inside her Southeast Portland house strangled him to death with her hands after a violent struggle.

Neighbors say Susan E. Kuhnhausen, 51, had just gotten off work at Providence Portland Medical Center and was still in her scrubs when she returned to her tidy home in the 7900 block of Southeast Alder Street shortly after 6 p.m.

Police say there was no obvious signs of forced entry in the front of the house. So Kuhnhausen was surprised to find an intruder inside. The stranger, neighbors say, was armed with a hammer. But the veteran emergency nurse went into crisis mode and escaped with only a few bruises and scrapes.


After the struggle, she ran to a neighboring house for help, and the neighbor called 9-1-1 at 6:51 p.m. By the time police arrived, 59-year-old Edward Dalton Haffey,, a convicted felon with a long record, lay dead in her home.

"Everyone that I've talked to today says 'Hurray' for Susan," said Anne Warnock, the neighbor who called 9-1-1. "She's a very brave and courageous woman. If they're picking teams, we want to be on her team."

Under state statute, a person can use a reasonable degree of deadly force when defending themselves against an intruder or someone who is burglarizing their home. But police said the case was unusual in that a homeowner acting in self-defense strangled an intruder, as opposed to using a weapon, such as a firearm or knife.

"But when you're fighting for your life, you will use whatever means is necessary," said Portland Officer Cathe Kent, a police spokeswoman. "In this case, the homeowner did what she had to do to get out safely."

A man who answered the phone at Kuhnhausen's home Thursday night declined to comment.

The neighbor said Kuhnhausen wasn't too shaken up when she fled to her house.

"You didn't need to calm her," Warnock said. "She's an emergency room nurse. She's used to dealing with crisis. She was very clear thinking and took care of the problem."

An ambulance was called to take Kuhnhausen to Providence Portland Medical Center for treatment. She walked to the gurney, Warnock said. Police said she was treated and released from the hospital Wednesday night.

Haffey -- a slight man of about 5-foot-9 and 180 pounds, according to his driver's license -- was released from prison in November 2003, following a 20-year sentence for robbery out of Douglas County and a 1994 conspiracy to commit aggravated murder conviction in Polk County, according to Perrin Damon, an Oregon Department of Corrections spokeswoman. Since 1985, Haffey also has been convicted of delivery and manufacture of drugs and possession of burglary tools.

Kuhnhausen's size, at about 5-foot-7, 260 pounds, may have also given her some advantage over her opponent, neighbors said.


She's been a nurse for 30 years and has served as secretary of the Oregon Emergency Nurses Association.

In a 2005 association newsletter, she wrote about how she'd "probably seen it all" on the job and was pushing for legislation to prevent violence against nurses in the workplace.

"I've been assaulted twice and bit, hit, kicked and punched by patients . . . who know better . . .," she wrote.

"The potential for violence at the hospital always exists and we need to send a message that it's not okay to assault any public servant whether it be a police officer, firefighter or nurse."

Paula Derr, a Life Flight nurse who is a fellow member of the emergency nurses association, said Kuhnhausen is an outstanding nurse and strong advocate for protecting nurses.

She said Kuhnhausen is helping raise a grandchild at her home. Neighbors said the child was not in the home Wednesday night.

Derr says she's not surprised how Kuhnhausen reacted to the stranger in her house. "She was struggling for her life, like any of us would," Derr said. "She's strong, solid in stature."

Residents of Kuhnhausen's neighborhood were pleased with her actions, and glad she wasn't hurt too bad.

They spoke of other break-ins around the neighborhood in recent months, as well as car prowls. Deanna Hall, who lives nearby, said a man entered her home in midafternoon July 13 when she was home with her three young children. She said she had to keep him at bay with a knife until he ran out, and police arrested him.

"I wish I had that much strength," Hall said, talking of Kuhnhausen.

She said Kuhnhausen's ability to withstand what she sees in the emergency room for three decades says a lot about her character.

"Anybody that could be the type of nurse she has been for so long says a lot about her compassion and love," she said. "But she knows when to put her foot down. And, she doesn't take crap from anybody."

0 Replies
 
nimh
 
  1  
Reply Sat 9 Sep, 2006 08:49 am
Re: It Happened Again :
OmSigDAVID wrote:
Sadly for the rest of New York,
the criminal survived his wound;
well, maybe next time.

David

Yeah, the death penalty for every mugger!
0 Replies
 
OmSigDAVID
 
  1  
Reply Sat 9 Sep, 2006 09:06 am
Re: It Happened Again :
nimh wrote:
OmSigDAVID wrote:
Sadly for the rest of New York,
the criminal survived his wound;
well, maybe next time.

David

Yeah, the death penalty for every mugger!

Sounds like a good slogan for a political campaign !
David
0 Replies
 
OmSigDAVID
 
  1  
Reply Sat 9 Sep, 2006 09:20 am
boomerang wrote:
Anyone can be tough if they have a gun but this chick, man, she is tough:

Quote:
Nurse, 51, strangles intruder in her home
Self-defense - Susan Kuhnhausen wins a deadly struggle against a convicted felon armed with a hammer
Friday, September 08, 2006
MAXINE BERNSTEIN
An emergency room nurse who arrived home Wednesday night to find a strange man inside her Southeast Portland house strangled him to death with her hands after a violent struggle.

Neighbors say Susan E. Kuhnhausen, 51, had just gotten off work at Providence Portland Medical Center and was still in her scrubs when she returned to her tidy home in the 7900 block of Southeast Alder Street shortly after 6 p.m.

Police say there was no obvious signs of forced entry in the front of the house. So Kuhnhausen was surprised to find an intruder inside. The stranger, neighbors say, was armed with a hammer. But the veteran emergency nurse went into crisis mode and escaped with only a few bruises and scrapes.


After the struggle, she ran to a neighboring house for help, and the neighbor called 9-1-1 at 6:51 p.m. By the time police arrived, 59-year-old Edward Dalton Haffey,, a convicted felon with a long record, lay dead in her home.

"Everyone that I've talked to today says 'Hurray' for Susan," said Anne Warnock, the neighbor who called 9-1-1. "She's a very brave and courageous woman. If they're picking teams, we want to be on her team."

Under state statute, a person can use a reasonable degree of deadly force when defending themselves against an intruder or someone who is burglarizing their home. But police said the case was unusual in that a homeowner acting in self-defense strangled an intruder, as opposed to using a weapon, such as a firearm or knife.

"But when you're fighting for your life, you will use whatever means is necessary," said Portland Officer Cathe Kent, a police spokeswoman. "In this case, the homeowner did what she had to do to get out safely."

A man who answered the phone at Kuhnhausen's home Thursday night declined to comment.

The neighbor said Kuhnhausen wasn't too shaken up when she fled to her house.

"You didn't need to calm her," Warnock said. "She's an emergency room nurse. She's used to dealing with crisis. She was very clear thinking and took care of the problem."

An ambulance was called to take Kuhnhausen to Providence Portland Medical Center for treatment. She walked to the gurney, Warnock said. Police said she was treated and released from the hospital Wednesday night.

Haffey -- a slight man of about 5-foot-9 and 180 pounds, according to his driver's license -- was released from prison in November 2003, following a 20-year sentence for robbery out of Douglas County and a 1994 conspiracy to commit aggravated murder conviction in Polk County, according to Perrin Damon, an Oregon Department of Corrections spokeswoman. Since 1985, Haffey also has been convicted of delivery and manufacture of drugs and possession of burglary tools.

Kuhnhausen's size, at about 5-foot-7, 260 pounds, may have also given her some advantage over her opponent, neighbors said.


She's been a nurse for 30 years and has served as secretary of the Oregon Emergency Nurses Association.

In a 2005 association newsletter, she wrote about how she'd "probably seen it all" on the job and was pushing for legislation to prevent violence against nurses in the workplace.

"I've been assaulted twice and bit, hit, kicked and punched by patients . . . who know better . . .," she wrote.

"The potential for violence at the hospital always exists and we need to send a message that it's not okay to assault any public servant whether it be a police officer, firefighter or nurse."

Paula Derr, a Life Flight nurse who is a fellow member of the emergency nurses association, said Kuhnhausen is an outstanding nurse
and strong advocate for protecting nurses.

She said Kuhnhausen is helping raise a grandchild at her home. Neighbors said the child was not in the home Wednesday night.

Derr says she's not surprised how Kuhnhausen reacted to the stranger in her house. "She was struggling for her life, like any of us would," Derr said. "She's strong, solid in stature."

Residents of Kuhnhausen's neighborhood were pleased with her actions, and glad she wasn't hurt too bad.

They spoke of other break-ins around the neighborhood in recent months, as well as car prowls. Deanna Hall, who lives nearby, said a man entered her home in midafternoon July 13 when she was home with her three young children. She said she had to keep him at bay with a knife until he ran out, and police arrested him.

"I wish I had that much strength," Hall said, talking of Kuhnhausen.

She said Kuhnhausen's ability to withstand what she sees in the emergency room for three decades says a lot about her character.

"Anybody that could be the type of nurse she has been for so long says a lot about her compassion and love," she said. "But she knows when to put her foot down. And, she doesn't take crap from anybody."


She used her right to bare arms,
and hands; however, Man is a tool using species.

Few r the jobs that we do without selected tools.
We have crafted some tools specificly
for use in self defense.
David
0 Replies
 
 

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