Tuesday, October 1, 2024
Weird Stuff

Magnum-toting senior thwarts home invasion [News of the Weird] – Reading Eagle

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E-Edition
Police in Rose, Idaho, revealed on April 10 the names of the victim and suspect in a home invasion that took place in March, EastIdahoNews.com reported. Officials said that around 2 a.m., 85-year-old Christine Jenneiahn was sleeping in her home when she awoke to a man shining a flashlight and pointing a gun at her. Derek Ephriam Condon, 39, allegedly then handcuffed Jenneiahn and moved her to the living room, where he cuffed her to a chair and asked her where the valuables were. She told him there were two safes, and he left to investigate. While he was out of the room, Jenneiahn dragged herself and the chair into her bedroom and got her .357 Magnum revolver, which she hid on a nearby couch after returning to the living room. Ultimately, she made a “now or never” decision and drew the gun, striking Condon with two shots. He returned fire, hitting her multiple times, but Jenneiahn survived and has already left the hospital. Condon was fatally wounded The case, said Bingham County Prosecutor Ryan Jolley, “presents one of the most heroic acts of self-preservation I have ever heard of.” Officials said the two knew each other and it was not a random incident.
In the wee hours of April 10 at a train station in Sydney, Australia, an unexpected commuter showed up, United Press International reported. A horse, wearing a blanket, appeared on the Warwick Farm station platform during heavy storms and tried to board the train. The escapade was captured on security camera video. The horse trotted up and down the platform and chased another rider before its owner was summoned to collect it. Transport for New South Wales declared that the would-be rider was “only horsing around” and was returned to his residence.
At the Country Oaks Elementary School in Hendry County, Fla., two 10-year-old boys were trading more than Lunchables on March 27. ClickOrlando reported that one of the boys had agreed in February to sell a handgun belonging to his father, who had recently died, to another for $300. The gun was located under a shed in the boy’s backyard, along with a baggie containing 74 grams of marijuana. Both boys were arrested — one for selling a firearm to a minor, the other for purchasing a firearm as a minor. The seller’s mom is a sheriff’s deputy; she was put on administrative leave while the investigation continues.
Peter Owens, 35, of Ellenton, Fla., went to a Walgreens store in Clearwater on Easter Sunday to buy some headphones, The Smoking Gun reported. While there, he got into an argument with an employee of the store, and the manager, 36-year-old Nicole Merck, tried to intervene, asking Owens to leave the store. That was when Owens, according to police, struck Merck in the face with his Bible. Authorities tracked him down, and he admitted striking her “because she was being rude to him.” The charge was bumped up to a felony because of Owens’ 2020 conviction in Michigan for assault and battery. WWJD?
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