| http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=33011

Wednesday, June 11, 2003
CRIMENETDAILY
'Defend
your family, go to jail'
Dad
who saved son from intruder incarcerated for unregistered gun
Posted: June 11, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern
© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com
A Brooklyn man who shot and
wounded an intruder while defending his family will spend three
days in Rikers Island, the same jail housing the burglar who
terrorized his home, because he owns an unregistered gun.
Ronald Dixon, a 27-year-old
father of two, caught an intruder rifling through drawers in his
son's room early on Dec. 14.
"I went in. … I looked in
his face. I didn't know this guy; I was so shocked. … In a
nervous voice I said, 'What are you doing in my house?' and he
ran toward me yelling, 'Come upstairs!' like there were other
people with him. I shot him 'cause I thought more people were in
the house," Dixon told the New York Daily News.
Dixon fired two shots from his .9
mm pistol, wounding the suspected burglar in the chest and
groin.
"The only thing I could
think about was my family – there was no telling what he would
do to my children or girlfriend," he told the paper.
Authorities charged Dixon with
illegal possession of a firearm when they discovered his gun was
not legally registered in New York, a charge that carries up to
a year in prison.
When Dixon proved he had obtained
the firearm legally in Florida and tried to register it in New
York, the prosecutors agreed to a charge of disorderly conduct.
Dixon pleaded guilty to the
disorderly conduct charge, which will allow him to do time
without carrying a criminal record. Sentencing is scheduled for
June 27, WINS Radio reports.
The intruder turned out to be
Ivan Thompson, a career criminal with a 14-page rap sheet.
Thompson has been arrested 19 times and been convicted of
criminal trespass, burglary and attempted assault. He currently
is on parole until 2004 on burglary charges.
"Clearly [Dixon] was
justified in shooting this burglar, and the burglar is going to
get as much jail time as we can get him," Brooklyn District
Attorney Charles Hynes told the News.
But Hynes will not budge from his
tough anti-gun policy.
"If you get caught with a
gun in Brooklyn, you're going to do jail time," said Hynes,
who has held that stance since taking office in 1990, when, he
says, "Brooklyn was like Dodge City."
Dixon's case has attracted
widespread attention and many letters addressed to Hynes,
including this anonymous letter, which sums up the feelings of
many supporters:
"If you were in the same
position that Mr. Dixon was in, I would be willing to wager that
you would also use whatever means you had on hand to defend your
loved ones, as any of us would.
"By prosecuting Ronald Dixon
on spurious charges, you are sending a very dangerous message to
the residents in your jurisdiction: Defend your family, go to
jail. You are also sending an equally dangerous message to the
criminal element, who would realize that law-abiding citizens
would now be hesitant to defend themselves for fear of criminal
prosecution, and therefore make prime targets for violent
crime."
A Jamaican immigrant, Dixon
served in the Navy from 1994 to 1997 in weapons ordnance and
holds down two computer-related jobs.
"I work seven days a week. I
have been doing it for three years, because I wanted a safe
haven for my family," he told the News.
"I thought the house would
give me a safe haven. Now I'm thinking if I didn't buy this
house this never would have happened."
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