Key Takeaways
- A Philadelphia man shot an intruder during a home invasion after hearing his neighbor scream for help.
- The intruder, who forced entry into the apartment, attacked the mother before her neighbor intervened.
- Pennsylvania law permits the use of force to defend others, aligning with the neighbor’s actions in this case.
- The mother believes she and her daughter would have been killed if the neighbor hadn’t acted swiftly.
- This incident illustrates the effectiveness of the Second Amendment in protecting families in danger.
Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
PHILADELPHIA, PA — An armed Philadelphia man shot and killed an intruder early Monday morning after hearing his upstairs neighbor screaming for help during a forced-entry home invasion in the Rhawnhurst neighborhood, according to 6ABC.
Police told 6ABC that a man believed to be in his 40s forced open the front door of a second-floor apartment around 1:00 a.m. on the 1600 block of Griffith Street. The apartment was occupied by a single mother and her 14-year-old daughter, both of whom were asleep. The intruder went directly to the daughter’s bedroom.
The mother, identified only as Evelyn, told reporters she heard a commotion and at first assumed one of her cats had knocked something over. When she got up to investigate, she found a man she did not recognize inside her daughter’s room. She confronted him, and a violent struggle followed. She suffered injuries to her hand and collarbone before she was able to scream for help.
Her downstairs neighbor heard her, armed himself, and went upstairs to confront the suspect. The struggle moved into the basement of the building. Police said the intruder was holding a stick. The neighbor ordered him to drop it, and when he refused, the neighbor shot him once in the chest.
The intruder was rushed to a hospital and pronounced dead. Investigators noted the front door had been forced open and reported a suspicious vehicle parked outside the home. Homicide detectives are continuing to investigate, and 6ABC reports that police have not yet announced whether any charges will be filed. Evelyn told reporters she believes the intruder would have killed her and her daughter if her neighbor had not stepped in.
Defense of Others Under Pennsylvania Law
Pennsylvania law explicitly authorizes the use of force to defend a third person. Under 18 Pa.C.S. Section 506, a person can use the same force to protect someone else that the other person would have been legally allowed to use in their own defense. The mother in this case was being attacked by an armed intruder who had forced his way into her home in the middle of the night. Her right to use deadly force in self-defense is well established under Pennsylvania’s Castle Doctrine at 18 Pa.C.S. Section 505, and the neighbor’s right to act on her behalf tracks that framework directly.
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Takeaway
This is what the Second Amendment looks like when it works the way it is supposed to. A neighbor heard a woman and a child in danger, chose to close the distance rather than wait for police, gave the intruder a chance to drop his weapon, and stopped him when he refused. A mother and her 14-year-old daughter went to bed in an apartment that was supposed to be safe. They are both alive this morning because their downstairs neighbor was capable, willing, and lawfully armed.
The first line of defense for any family is the family itself. The second is the people who live closest to them.
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