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Pistol-packing Soccer Mom Shot Dead

October 9th, 2009 1 comment

In a tragic event a Pistol Packing Mom was shot dead by husband while chatting on a web-cam in Lebanon, PA.

Meleanie Hain, 31, a second amendment advocate and champion became popular last year (2008) after carrying a holstered pistol to her child’s soccer game on September 11th.   The murder was witnessed live by a friend on the internet via web-chat by her husband.   The husband is reportedly to have committed suicide shortly after killing his wife.   The couples three children were at home during the horrific incident and were unharmed.

Read the article from the York Daily Record:

Gun-toting soccer mom shot, killed in Lebanon

By JOHN LATIMER

A Lebanon woman who gained national notoriety last year as a champion of Second Amendment rights after she brought her loaded handgun to her 5-year-old daughter’s soccer game was shot and killed Wednesday night in an apparent murder-suicide.Meleanie Hain, 31, and her husband Scott Hain, 33, were pronounced dead by Lebanon County coroner Dr. Jeffrey Yocum shortly after 8:30 p.m. after a two-hour standoff with police outside of their home at the corner of Second Avenue and East Grant Street. The episode ended quietly when police entered the house after trying to make contact with anyone inside.

No cause of death was announced, and autopsies were to be scheduled for today, said Yocum.

Lebanon police Chief Daniel Wright was guarded with information as detectives began the preliminary stages of the investigation late Wednesday night. He acknowledged that the Hains were both found dead and had suffered gunshot wounds inside their 1 ½-story brick home in a quiet neighborhood in Lebanon’s south side. He would not provide any additional details, other then to say that police do not feel any other people were involved.

District Attorney David Arnold, who was at the scene, refused to comment.

Several neighbors said they heard or saw the couple’s children run from the house screaming, “Daddy shot Mommy!” shortly before the 911 Center was called at 6:20 p.m.

The children, 2- and 6-year-old girls and a 10-year-old boy, were in the care of a neighbor and were unhurt, said Wright.

The Lebanon County Emergency Services Unit was quickly called to the scene and the neighborhood cordoned off.

The front door of the house was open and light could be seen inside the living room. But all inside and around the house was quiet as members of the Lebanon police and tactical team, armed with rifles, took up positions.

Petra Bossler, who lives next to the Hain home on Grant Street, said she did not hear any commotion or gunfire from the Hain home. She learned something had happened only when police came to her door and asked to come inside so they could peer from her windows at the Hain house, which is just several feet away.

Debbie Mise, who lives on East Grant Street, three doors away from the Hains, said she heard a strange sound followed by the screams of the children, which she mistook for playing.

“I heard something heavy drop or fall, and then right away I heard the kids screaming, but I thought they were playing,” she said. “It was loud. But it didn’t sound like a pop.”

Brian Witmer, who lives between Mise and Bossler said he saw Scott Hain mowing the lawn about 3:30 p.m. Wednesday.

“He was mowing his lawn, and the dog was outside. There was nothing out of the ordinary. He didn’t seem strange at all,” he said.

Mise said she had a feeling something bad would eventually happen at the Hain home.

“She just wasn’t right,” Mise said of Meleanie Hain. “You don’t bring a gun to a kids’ soccer game, and you don’t wear a gun when you go shopping at Kohl’s.”

Meleanie Hain was dubbed the pistol-packin’ soccer mom by the media in September 2008 after it was first reported in the Lebanon Daily News that she wore her holstered 9mm Glock pistol to her daughter’s soccer match. She became a spokeswoman of sorts for open-carry advocates — who support the right to carry a gun in the open — after complaints caused county Sheriff Mike DeLeo to confiscate her concealed-weapon permit.

Hain appealed the action, and after a hearing DeLeo was ordered to return the permit.

Hain did not let the matter end there. She filed a federal civil-rights lawsuit against DeLeo. That trial was awaiting scheduling in U.S. Middle District Court.

Meleanie Hain at last report operated a day care center in her home.

Her husband was a parole officer in Berks County and a former prison guard at the State Correctional Institute in Camp Hill. He also had worked part-time for Lebanon County Central Booking.

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Happy Thanksgiving

November 27th, 2008 No comments

Thanksgiving TurkeyHappy Thanksgiving from the Bullet Boy.

Holiday’s are supposed to be filled with joy and family time.   Don’t mess that up with Druck Driving.   Here in Alabama every holiday season the State Troopers run a Take Back our Highways campaign.   If you are drinking then you should know the risk involved with driving.   It isn’t about your safety as much as it is the people around you.   So do me a favor don’t drink and drive. Though most states have a low blood alcohol tolerance having a concealed weapon with traces of alcohol in your system is not tolerated.   So if you do decide to drive you don’t carry your gun as you will be illegally in possession of a concealed firearm.

“Take Back Our Highways campaign” from the Birmingham News

Alabama Department of Public Safety launches its fourth Take Back Our Highways campaign today.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

THE ISSUE: The Alabama Department of Public Safety launches the fourth Take Back Our Highways campaign today.

There’s nothing wrong with Alabama’s drunken-driving laws. They’re tough.

We were among the first states to lower the blood-alcohol content level to 0.08 percent. A first drunken-driving offense can result in a 90-day suspended driver license, a fine between $600 and $2,100 and up to a year in a county or municipal jail. Subsequent offenses have harsher penalties, including almost certain jail time.

There’s no mystery why Alabama’s laws are so tough: to discourage people from driving under the influence. The state has a good reason to compel motorists not to drink and drive. Impaired drivers are involved in a high percentage of the traffic deaths and injuries on state roads. Innocent motorists are hit by drunken drivers and killed, maimed for life or seriously injured. That can cause everybody’s insurance premiums to go up, but that’s not all. When people can’t take care of their own medical bills because they don’t have insurance (or the drunken driver had none or very little), the government has to pay. The government is us, the taxpayers.

Still, the most stringent law is worthless if it’s not aggressively enforced. Over the years, enforcement of Alabama DUI laws has been spotty at best. One reason is the lack of state troopers patrolling highways and roads. The Alabama Department of Public Safety is far short of the troopers it needs to adequately patrol the thousands of miles of state roadways.

A strategy DPS has been using to get around the chronic trooper shortage is periodical traffic blitzes. The fourth Take Back Our Highways campaign starts today and goes through Nov. 26, the day before Thanksgiving. The blitz goes 24 hours a day for the whole week.

The focus of this blitz, which will include sheriffs, police departments and every available state trooper, is drunken drivers. One of the tools troopers will use this week is sobriety checkpoints at different locations around the state. The state’s mobile DUI labs will be nearby so that blood-alcohol tests can be given on the spot.

While drunken driving is the focus, traffic stops aren’t limited to impaired drivers. Anybody violating a traffic law is subject to ticketing or arrest.

Past blitzes have been successful. The most recent, at the end of August, saw law officers write more than 21,700 tickets, about 40 percent of them for speeding and 203 for DUI. With troopers and sheriffs concentrating on impaired driving this week, expect more DUI arrests.

Smart drivers understand the odds of getting caught go up dramatically during these blitzes. The others – and there are plenty of them – are likely to get a ticket or spend some time in jail.

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