Seth wrote:Well, the half-truth. Here's the truth from the New York Times:egbert wrote:Whopper of the Month:
Here's the Truth:Seth wrote:The "white guy in Louisana" didn't shoot the Japanese exchange student merely because the student went to the wrong house by mistake, he shot the student because the drunken, violent Japanese exchange student at the wrong house tried to break into the white guy's house repeatedly, and despite being told many times he would be shot if he didn't desist, and despite being presented with a frightened homeowner visibly armed with a handgun, the
drunken, violent Japanese student continued to advance on the homeowner in a manner which reasonably lead the homeowner to believe his life, or his wife's life, was in imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury, which justified his firing his gun.
Lesson: Don't get drunk and wander about in the wee small hours of the morning in places unfamiliar to you, and don't try to violently break into any house anywhere, especially in the United States, because it'll likely get you justifiably shot dead.
"This is not an American or Oriental or any other known being casually walking up to the front door and saying, 'Hello, we're looking for the party,' " Mr. Unglesby said in his opening statement. "That's not what happened."
It was Yoshi Hattori's walk that made him, that dark night, frightening in the lawyer's telling. "Yoshi had an extremely unusual way of moving," Mr. Unglesby told the jury. "It's been described as aggressive. It's been described as kinetic. It's been described as antsy.
"It's been described as scary," Mr. Unglesby concluded. "He would come right up to you, as fast as he could."
...
She "screamed" for her husband to get his gun, Mr. Unglesby said. The boys had meanwhile walked to the sidewalk, 10 yards away. They heard the door at the end of the adjacent carport open. Mr. Peairs, in the prosecutor's telling, was not inside his house, but just outside the doorway of the carport. Yoshi Hattori began walking toward him, the district attorney said.
Mr. Haymaker heard Rodney Peairs shout "freeze." He saw that Mr. Peairs was holding a large gun. But the victim apparently did not see the gun, and he did not understand the word "freeze." 'Something Bad Wrong'
He was acting in a way no American would ever act, the defendant's lawyer said.
Mr. Peairs knew "there's something bad wrong," Mr. Unglesby told the jury today. " 'This person is not afraid of my gun. He's not respectful of my property. He has no fear whatever.' That's what Rodney Peairs knew." Source: http://www.nytimes.com/1993/05/21/us/de ... d=2&src=pm
The jury acquitted him, which means that it's your version of the incident that's a lie.Acquittal in Doorstep Killing of Japanese Student
Published: May 24, 1993
A jury today found a local meat market manager not guilty in the fatal shooting of a Japanese exchange student, ending a case that exposed major differences between the attitudes of Japanese and Americans toward guns.
The focus of Mr. Unglesby's defense was that Mr. Peairs had acted reasonably as a frightened homeowner in shooting Mr. Hattori when the young man rushed toward him that night while trying to find the party. "We have two people colliding from completely different perspectives," Mr. Unglesby said, "one who sees an intruder who is a danger to his family, who sees a person with a grin or smile on his face coming to his house with absolutely no respect for his home, his gun, or his warning."
During those moments, the suburban household was in turmoil and terror, according to testimony. Without exchanging any words with his wife, Mr. Peairs responded to her frightened demand that he get his gun. He pulled a loaded .44-caliber Magnum revolver from his suitcase, went to the door of his carport, opened it, and fired at Mr. Hattori after the boy failed to heed his warning to "freeze."
Just then, Mrs. Peairs spotted Mr. Hattori coming around a corner. "He was coming real fast towards me," she testified. "I had never had somebody come at me like that before. I was terrified."
The young man spoke little English. Partly out of frustration, partly out of a desire to communicate instantly, testimony indicated, he often rushed up to people, waving his arms, which is what he did that night.
When Mrs. Peairs called her husband to get his gun, Mr. Peairs said he did not ask any questions. Rushing to a back room, he retrieved his revolver.
Running to the carport door, he spotted someone coming from behind one of his parked cars "real fast," he testified. He said he pointed the gun and yelled "freeze" to the two teen-agers, but he said Mr. Hattori kept coming. Mr. Peairs testified that he saw Mr. Hattori holding something in one of his outstretched arms -- a camera, it was later learned.
Mr. Hattori may not have noticed the gun because he had lost a contact lens earlier, his father said.
"I wanted him to stop," Mr. Peairs testified. "He didn't. He kept coming. The next thing I remember, I was scared to death. This person was not going to stop. This person was going to do harm to me." With the young man less than five feet away, he fired one shot into his chest.
"I felt I had no choice," Mr. Peairs said. "I couldn't understand why this person wouldn't stop."



Seth digs himself in deeper!
Seth claims the drunken Japanese exchange student
Where, in this laughable "rebuttal" is there a shred of evidence that Japanese student was drunk?





