Close Menu
Gun Day Fun DayGun Day Fun Day
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Gun Day Fun DayGun Day Fun Day
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Gun Day Fun DayGun Day Fun Day
Home»Latest News»Convicted Felon Kicks in Doors of Four Occupied Jacksonville Homes With a Handgun, Stopped Only When Police Arrive
Latest News

Convicted Felon Kicks in Doors of Four Occupied Jacksonville Homes With a Handgun, Stopped Only When Police Arrive

Sam DanielsBy Sam DanielsMay 5, 20267 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Convicted Felon Kicks in Doors of Four Occupied Jacksonville Homes With a Handgun, Stopped Only When Police Arrive
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Key Takeaways

  • A convicted felon armed with a handgun unlawfully entered four occupied homes in Jacksonville, making threats to residents before encountering police.
  • The suspect pointed his firearm at responding officers, which resulted in them returning fire and killing him on the scene.
  • The incident underscores the importance of home defense and the responsibility of citizens to protect themselves against armed intruders.
  • The situation illustrates that police response takes time, emphasizing that homeowners must be prepared to act in an emergency.
  • This event serves as a powerful argument for Second Amendment rights, reflecting the necessity of armed self-defense in critical situations.

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

JACKSONVILLE, FL — A convicted felon armed with a handgun kicked in the doors of four occupied residences in Jacksonville’s Holiday Hill area Monday night, made threats to residents inside, and was only stopped after he pointed his handgun at responding officers and they returned fire.

According to a press briefing by Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office Sheriff T.K. Waters and Undersheriff Shawn Coarsey on May 5, 2026, patrol officers were dispatched to the 8200 block of Rigel Road around 11:30 p.m. Monday in response to an armed criminal mischief call.

The Suspect’s Path Through Four Occupied Homes

The suspect, identified by JSO as a Black male in his 30s and a convicted felon in both Florida and Texas, kicked in the doors of four separate residences in a short span of time. According to Undersheriff Coarsey, the suspect was armed with a handgun and made contact with residents inside two of the homes, made statements to them, and then exited and moved to the next residence.

Every one of the four homes was occupied at the time. Children were inside at least one of the residences, according to Coarsey.

The suspect made one statement to a resident that the Undersheriff specifically noted at the briefing.

“This is it. This is my last day,” the suspect told one of the residents, according to Undersheriff Coarsey.

To JSO’s knowledge, nothing was stolen. The crime that took place at each home was an armed burglary in which the suspect entered, threatened the occupants with a firearm, and left.

The Confrontation With Officers

Officers from JSO District 2 responded to the calls. They were standing outside one of the residences speaking with a victim when the suspect approached them on foot.

“They were standing outside one of the residences, speaking to the person that lived there,” Coarsey said. “The body cam shows and there’s surveillance video that shows that suspect approached those officers. He walked between two vehicles that were parked like in a driveway. It’s hard to tell where he came from. It was dark from the area that he came from.”

As the suspect closed on the officers, the resident they were speaking with reportedly recognized him and said “There he is right there.”

The suspect raised his handgun and pointed it at the officers. They ordered him to drop the gun. He did not. Four officers fired their weapons, killing the suspect at the scene.

The Undersheriff said the entire encounter from approach to gunfire was a matter of seconds.

“It was very quick. Yeah, it was very quick. He surprised them. And thankfully, he didn’t get a shot off and injure anyone.”

The four officers involved in the shooting were identified as Officer R. Vazquez, Officer G. Comayagua, Officer J. Pallint, and Officer A. Schmidt. No officers were injured. The State Attorney’s Office is conducting an independent investigation, after which JSO will conduct its own internal review. This is the eighth officer-involved shooting of the year for JSO.

The suspect has been identified by investigators but his name has not been released pending next of kin notification.

More from USA Carry:

Why We Carry and Why Home Defense Matters

This is why we carry guns. This is why responsible Americans keep firearms in their homes for self-defense.

A convicted felon, prohibited under federal law from possessing a firearm, had a handgun anyway. He kicked in the doors of four homes occupied by sleeping families. He pointed that handgun at residents inside their own bedrooms and living rooms. He told one resident that this was his last day, a statement that suggests he was prepared for the night to end in violence regardless of how it played out.

Four families faced an armed criminal forcibly entering their home in the middle of the night, and the only thing that ultimately stopped him was four officers with firearms returning fire when he pointed his gun at them.

Think carefully about the timeline. The suspect kicked in his first door. The residents called police. Officers were dispatched and responded. By the time officers arrived and began speaking with victims, the suspect had already moved through multiple homes and was approaching from the dark with his handgun raised. The window between the first 911 call and the suspect ending up in a fourth home was filled with families who had to handle that initial encounter on their own, with whatever they had at hand.

For armed citizens, this case reinforces a hard truth that gets repeated for a reason. The police cannot teleport. Even an excellent law enforcement response to an in-progress armed burglary takes minutes, and seconds matter when an armed felon is inside your home pointing a gun at you. The first line of defense in your home at 11:30 at night is you.

The Pro-2A Case in One Incident

This incident is the entire pro-Second Amendment argument distilled into a single night.

A criminal who was already prohibited from owning a firearm had one anyway. Laws that disarm law-abiding people do nothing to disarm people like him. He was undeterred by the fact that his actions were felonies in every state in America. He was undeterred by the fact that there were people inside the homes he was kicking in. He was undeterred until he pointed a firearm at four officers who had firearms of their own.

The Second Amendment is a fundamental civil right precisely because of nights like this one. The right of a homeowner to be armed inside their own residence, ready to defend themselves and their family against a violent intruder, is not a hypothetical. It is the practical answer to the question of what a family should do when a stranger kicks in their door at 11:30 at night with a handgun in his hand and threats coming out of his mouth.

Every family in those four Jacksonville homes had to make decisions in real time, with no warning, in the middle of the night. Some of them had children in the house. None of them knew if the suspect was going to come back. None of them knew if the next person to kick in their door would.

Building a serious home defense plan is not paranoia. It is recognizing that incidents like this one happen, and that the time to prepare is before they do. That includes thinking through how you would secure your home, how you would communicate with family members, where your firearm is stored, how you would access it under stress, and what your state’s law allows in defense of yourself and your family inside your own home.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Flying with Guns: Episode 55 – Delta from New Orleans to Salt Lake City

May 5, 2026

Video Shows Texas Father Fighting Off Carjacker With 5 Kids In The Car, Fatally Shooting Him

May 5, 2026

TandemKross TKX22 Light Rifle

May 5, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest firearm news and updates directly to your inbox.

Editor's Picks

United Nations Chief Rejects U.S. Conditions Back Dues, Declaring Payments “Non-Negotiable”

May 5, 2026

Flying with Guns: Episode 55 – Delta from New Orleans to Salt Lake City

May 5, 2026

Video Shows Texas Father Fighting Off Carjacker With 5 Kids In The Car, Fatally Shooting Him

May 5, 2026

Trump’s Disapproval Rating Hits All-Time High of 62%

May 5, 2026
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
© 2026 Gun Day Fun Day. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.