Gun Control & RKBA
Related: About this forumBooby traps: Man in Maine killed by own device
A 65-year-old American man who rigged his home with a booby trap to keep out intruders has been killed by the device.
Ronald Cyr called police in the town of Van Buren in the state of Maine to say he had been shot.
Police found a door had been designed to fire a handgun should anyone attempt to enter. Mr Cyr was taken to hospital but died of his injuries.
It is not uncommon for home-owners to install such traps - but it is illegal.
Police in Van Buren, which borders the Canadian province of New Brunswick, said they responded to a 911 call in the early evening of Thanksgiving, last Thursday, from a man who said he had been shot.
"Following an extensive investigation that lasted into the early morning... it was determined that Mr Cyr had been shot as the result of the unintentional discharge of one of his homemade devices," the police department said in a Facebook post.
"Regretfully, Mr Cyr succumbed to the injuries he sustained from the gunshot."
It is not known how he managed to set off the device.
The police also found other possible devices and called in help from the Maine State Police Bomb Squad.
There have been other cases of booby-trapped homes in the US.
In February, a team of real estate investors walking through a home they had bought in Philadelphia discovered that a staircase had been rigged with string which, if tripped, would have triggered a swinging knife.
In September last year, a man in Illinois was killed when he opened a neighbour's shed that had been rigged to fire a shotgun. William Wasmund, 48, was found guilty this September of first-degree murder and aggravated battery.
And in October last year a man in Oregon was charged after fortifying his home "like a scene from Raiders of the Lost Ark".
FBI agents found a circular hot tub linked up to a tripwire, a fortified front door, animal traps and a wheelchair rigged with a shotgun that went off, hitting an agent in the leg....................
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50619952
catbyte
(35,772 posts)To live in such constant fear. I can't imagine how much it must suck to be them.
rampartc
(5,835 posts)after 14 burglaries at my home in rural Mississippi I began to realize that some of my neighbors were "clocking" my comings and goings. of course, by that time I had nothing of value left to steal.
I moved to inner city new orleans and have had zero problems since.
Throck
(2,520 posts)What pushes people to do acts this extreme? What this individual did was wrong but how is a burglary victim to respond?
safeinOhio
(34,077 posts)Forgot he had set the trigger before he went out to get the mail.
Throck
(2,520 posts)ferfrans62
(5 posts)I hate thieves though, so I am a little torn.
yagotme
(3,816 posts)"It is not uncommon for home-owners to install such traps - but it is illegal."
How do they define the commonality of this event? Percentage of homeowners? How is this calculated?