Man armed with
BB gun killed in robbery attempt
Would
We Call This a Failure in Target Selection?
By KIMATHI
LEWIS
A man armed
with a BB gun died while he and his partner tried to rob a pair of
Charlotte businessmen Thursday outside a motel on Broad River Road,
police said.
The robbers
didn't know these were ex-military officers, one of whom built his
career on teaching anti-terrorism skills to state officials,
according to newspaper reports.
Jonathan James
Berry, 32, died outside the Best Inn at 1029 Briargate Circle after
the businessmen shot him three times in the chest and once in the
side, Richland County Coroner Frank Barron said.
Police charged
Berry's partner, Richard Sean Harley, 32, of 1119 Shirlington Road,
with attempted armed robbery and conspiracy to commit armed robbery,
according to jail records. Harley was not injured.
Harley, who has
history of stealing, driving and domestic violence offenses, was
being held in the Richland County jail on $50,000 bail, reports
showed.
Richland County
sheriff's spokesman Cpl. Chris Cowan said Thomas Bullins and John
Nettles will not be charged in the 1 a.m. shooting.
"They were
lawfully carrying weapons," Cowan said. "They were well
within their rights."
The men did not
know the guns aimed at them weren't real, Cowan said.
Bullins,
reached at his North Carolina home late Thursday, said he did not
want to talk about the shooting.
"It was an
unfortunate incident," Bullins said. "Right now we want to
spend some time with our families and put it behind us."
Bullins told
investigators he and Nettles were leaving their room when Berry
approached what he thought was a handgun and raised it to Bullins'
face.
Berry demanded
money from Bullins, but Bullins grabbed Berry's forearm and the two
got into a struggle, officials said.
Bullins then
reached into his pocket and pulled out a .22-caliber handgun, firing
one shot that hit Berry in the aorta, Barron said.
That turned out
to be the fatal bullet, Barron said.
After the first
shot was fired, Nettles came out of his room, officials said.
Nettles fired
from a .45 semiautomatic, hitting Berry three times in the chest as
he continued to struggle with Bullins, Barron said.
The men, who
are also trained paramedics, performed CPR on Berry, but it was too
late, the coroner said.
The men went
after Harley, who was nearby at the time of the holdup, but later
fled, Cowan said.
He was caught
near the pool at the motel, officials said. They held him until
sheriff's deputies arrived.
After the men
recovered the weapons from the thieves, they realized they weren't
real, Cowan said.
Sheriff Leon
Lott said Bullins and Nettles were in Columbia to find out about
South Carolina laws governing security companies. They had meetings
Thursday at the State Law Enforcement Division and the police
academy.
"They are
ex-military Special Forces," Lott said. "They picked the
wrong two guys because they're trained to teach people how to handle
exactly the kind of situation they had last night."
Special Forces
soldiers are carefully selected, specially trained, and capable of
extended operations in extremely remote and hostile territory.
Staff writer
Clif LeBlanc contributed to this article.
Source:
The State.com
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