licensed to kill, but not to protect against domestic nightmares?

originally posted @ www.itamra.com/blah

why is it that our enlisted military staff and retired military vets are licensed to kill during military conflicts, and sworn to protect this country against all threats foreign and domestic, but are not allowed to carry concealed weapons in public places?

given all the wannabe infamous public shooters, our military staff should be allowed to carry concealed weapons in public places to minimize the loss of life the next time a crazed gunman enters a public place with the intent to kill anything that moves.

our military staff has to use the same public places we do and many attend a college or two in their local area while serving in the military. so instead of having everyone in public places become sitting ducks for crazed shooters, a concealed weapon carried by someone who is licensed to kill for this country could change the outcome of a shoot to kill situation.

how many more wake up calls are needed before we start allowing the right citizens to be armed at all times?

* the Virginia Tech shooting

* Atlanta or Houston shooting anywhere.

* the Utah mall shooting wait…Utah??!! that right there should have been the “F this, we need options” alert.

—–
😐 well damn spoke too soon but, of course, this is an extremely rare situation.

msnbc.com

Updated: 6:51 a.m. ET July 18, 2007

 

Police: Sharpshooter suspect kills self

 

National Guardsman accused of killing estranged wife as she sang in bar

 

The Associated Press

 

LARAMIE, Wyo. – A military sharpshooter accused of killing his estranged wife as she sang at a bar died Tuesday night after being found with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the chest, police said.

 

Wyoming Army National Guardsman David Munis was found by a search team at about 7:45 p.m. after police received an anonymous call from a man who spotted Munis at a small camping trailer in a remote area about 15 miles north of Laramie and about five miles outside the search area, Albany County Sheriff’s Lt. Michael Garcia said.

He had shot himself in the chest with a high-power rifle, Garcia said.

 

Munis, 36, was flown to a hospital and pronounced dead at 8:01 p.m., Garcia said.

 

“I’m glad it’s over,” the Laramie Boomerang quoted Garcia as saying. “The people in the community can now feel at rest, and the people in Roger’s Canyon can feel more at ease.”

 

Murdered on stage
Munis’ estranged wife, Robin Munis, 40, was singing with a classic-rock and country group at the Old Chicago restaurant and bar early Saturday when a bullet pierced a plate glass door and hit her in the head, killing her.

About 75 heavily armed officers had been searching for Munis in a canyon area near where his pickup was spotted late Monday.

 

Munis apparently shot himself as searchers closed in on him, Cheyenne police Lt. Mark Munari said.

 

Witnesses at the hospital where Munis was taken said they saw a body covered in a tarp being taken out of a helicopter.

“We were standing outside, and we saw a helicopter come in pretty fast and land,” said Evan Maurer, who was helping to install networking and telephone lines at the emergency room. “About eight guys in fatigues, looked like National Guardsman or Army, jumped out with M-16s.”

 

“They grabbed a body out of the copter and started carrying it,” Maurer said.

 

Munis was charged with first-degree murder earlier Tuesday.

 

The Munises were recently separated, and Robin Munis had contacted police just hours before the shooting to complain that he was making harassing calls to her cell phone.

Investigators said it was unclear whether the shot that killed her came from the restaurant parking lot, about 25 yards away, or from an open green space, roughly 100 yards off.

Witnesses told police that a pickup truck matching the one owned by David Munis was seen leaving the scene.

 

‘A near-confession’
A handwritten note of about six pages, addressed to “Everyone,” was found at Munis, home, police said Tuesday. “I’m calling it a near-confession,” Cheyenne police Capt. Jeff Schulz said. “He does not come out and say, ‘I did it.'” The police spokesman would not give details.

 

On Monday night, Munis’ truck was found in rugged mountains north of Laramie, about 50 miles west of Cheyenne. Police said they believed that Munis, a devoted hunter and outdoorsman, fled into terrain where his training and experience could give him the advantage.

Munis has been a member of the Wyoming Army National Guard since 2003, was previously in the Army and was a 2001 graduate of the Army Sniper School at Fort Benning, Ga., according to the National Guard.

 

“Apprehending a man with that kind of sniper skill and the weaponry he has available to him is an extremely dangerous type of proposition,” Schulz said earlier.

Munis was assigned to an infantry regiment at Ft. Campbell, Ky., according to Lt. Col. Kevin V. Arata, public affairs officer with the U.S. Army Human Resources Command. Arata said he couldn’t determine from Munis” military records if he was ever in combat.

 

© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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