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| Sat, 05-09-2009 - 1:53am |
There was a thread on here about a man in Texas who had called 911 to report that the house next door was being robbed. The man left his home despite the protestations of the 911 operator that he stay put in the safety of his home. He went out and shot and killed the robbers as they were leaving the scene of the crime. The vigilante was cleared of all charges because Texas has a law that basically sends the message, "shoot first, ask questions later." Well, a Texas couple shot four people, two were children. If the child dies, should they be charged with manslaughter or homocide or should they walk, because of Texas' special law?
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30650051
Couple accused of shooting 4, including 2 kids
Texas authorities say victims were off-roading when they were fired upon

Gale and Sheila Muhs, seen here in booking photos, are accused of shooting four people, including two children
Fri., May 8, 2009
HOUSTON - A couple has been accused of opening fire and wounding four people — including a 7-year-old boy and a 5-year-old girl — who they mistakenly thought were trespassing on their property.
The victims, who were off-roading near a residential area about 40 miles northeast of Houston, were struck with shotgun pellets late Thursday after stopping their vehicles near the Trinity River so the children could go to the bathroom, said Liberty County Chief Deputy Ken DeFoor.
Police said resident Sheila Muhs, 45, fired once with a 12-gauge shotgun, then handed it to her husband, Gayle Muhs, also 45. DeFoor said Sheila Muhs called 911 and told the dispatcher, "They're out here tearing up the levee, so I shot them."
The Muhs have been charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and remained in jail Friday. The Muhs don't have an attorney yet to comment on their case, DeFoor said.
Donald Coffey Jr., the 7-year-old boy, was shot in the head and was in critical condition Friday. Patrick Cammack, a friend of the boy's father who was driving in a separate vehicle, also was shot in the head and in critical condition.
Donald Coffey Sr., 36, had a pellet wound in his right shoulder. His daughter, 5-year-old Destiny, was shot in the elbow but was in good condition.
After the shootings, Coffey's wife, who also was riding in the SUV, drove the vehicle to a nearby fire station, where the victims were taken by helicopter to a hospital. The right rear window of the SUV had been shattered, and pellet marks covered the side of the vehicle, DeFoor said.
The victims said Coffey and Cammack took a county road to a residential levee in the Westlake subdivision near the Trinity River.
According to an 11-year-old boy who was also with the off-roading group, they did not stop on the levee but by the side of the road, DeFoor said.
Shortly afterward, DeFoor said, the shots were fired from about 40 yards away. DeFoor said the victims were unarmed.
"The levee is not private property, it belongs to the subdivision," said DeFoor. "Even if they were on the levee, it's not a shootable offense. It's ludicrous to shoot someone for going to the bathroom on the side of the road.">>>
'Castle law' arms Texas homeowners with right to shoot



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This had me crying this morning...
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/6424953.html
Amid tragic loss come acts of love
Liberty County shooting victim’s organs save 3 children
Family photo
Donald Coffey Jr. was killed after a trip to the Trinity River.
Even during the maddening grief he felt after the fatal shooting a week ago of his 7-year-old son, his own namesake whom he affectionately called “Junior,” he would not compromise his principle.
His thoughts turned to the two young sons of the couple charged with shooting his boy, and he decided to make sure they were being cared for. He thought, too, of other families going through the same pain as he and his wife, and they decided to donate their son’s organs.
Gale and Sheila Muhs are in the Liberty County Jail, charged in the shooting that killed Donald Coffey Jr. and wounded his father, his 5-year-old sister, Destiny, and family friend Patrick Cammack, 30.
The Muhses have two boys, ages 8 and 16, attending the same Dayton school district as Coffey’s two surviving children.
While eager for justice for his son, Coffey went to the school district offices to check on the welfare of the Muhses’ boys and learned they were safely at a grandmother’s home outside the district.
“I didn’t want anybody to bother them or pick on them. They’re not at all responsible for this,” Coffey said in his first interview since the shooting.
Dayton Superintendent Greg Hayman was surprised to learn of Coffey’s concern for the Muhses’ boys.
“I think it was an amazing expression of love in the face of insurmountable loss,” Hayman said. “It gives people hope.”
Family knew the Muhses
The group was returning from joy riding near a levee and swimming in the Trinity River when the shooting happened. They had pulled over in their vehicles on a publicly accessible road near the Muhses’ home, where a sign posted in front of their tiny house said trespassers would be shot and survivors would be shot again.
The Muhses, both 45, are charged with aggravated assault. The Liberty County Sheriff’s Office said Sheila Muhs called 911 after the shooting and reported, “They’re running over our levee in big-wheel vehicles, and I shot them.”
Despite that matter-of-fact explanation, Coffey doesn’t understand why the tragedy had to happen.
In the past, he said, he has given four-wheeler rides to the Muhses’ 8-year-old boy. He also recalls friendly visits with the Muhs family, including a jovial conversation with Sheila Muhs and her eldest son two hours before the shooting.
In those awful moments after the shooting, Coffey faced many decisions, but he said probably the most difficult was donating his son’s organs so other children might live.
He remembers “feeling weird” and unsure how his wife, Becky, would react. Their son’s organs were kept oxygenated after doctors declared him brain-dead Saturday at Children’s Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston.
Coffey knew his wife was struggling as much as he was to accept that their blond, bespectacled boy would never again run through the mud or ride through the Liberty County countryside he loved.
While most of the events at the hospital are a blur, Coffey remembers eventually telling hospital staff that he supported donating his son’s organs. But he ached at the thought of asking his wife’s permission, saying he just couldn’t do it.
That’s when he learned that his wife had given her permission minutes earlier.
“Neither of us could imagine having another family go through this, if we could help it,” he said. “There’s no words that exist in the dictionary that can describe what we’ve been through. It’s indescribable.”
Helping three children
When the Coffeys left the hospital without their son, they were told his organs had been used to save the lives of three children.
“I don’t know if there were any others later. It’s irrelevant to me,” Coffey said. “I won’t ask.”
But one day, the Coffeys would like to meet those who received the organs.
“We hope to know their names and talk to them,” he said. “We can’t force it, but we would like it.”
Catherine Burch Graham, spokeswoman for LifeGift, the organ and tissue recovery agency that handled the Coffey case, said she will help the couple compose a letter to the recipients about meeting.
“We usually wait at least six months because not only the families of the donors, but sometimes recipients, have emotional challenges,” she said, such as feeling guilty for being alive when another died.
Usually, only children have the organs small enough for other children, she said, and many die before one becomes available. Nearly 10,000 children and adults are waiting on transplant lists in Texas, and one in three will die before they have a donor, records show.
Graham said Donald Jr.’s legacy will be his gift to other children with life-threatening health issues.
"...deserve nothing less than the death penality."<
I somehow think the Coffeys would disagree.
True epitome of a redneck.
Wrong.
It's the true epitome of meth addicts.
The shooters have two children.
Ack!!
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