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Retired Green Beret Gets Court Martial After Shooting Intruder
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Smokey TaylorThe PC Free Zone is reporting that an 80-year-old retired Green Beret has been tried by his peers after shooting an intruder in his Knoxville, Tennessee home. He is the oldest member of Chapter XXXIII of the Special Forces Association.

BREVARD, Jan. 19, 2008 Retired Army Green Beret Smokey Taylor got his court martial this weekend and came away feeling good about it.
Taylor, at age 80 the oldest member of Chapter XXXIII of the Special Forces Association, was on trial by his peers under the charge of failing to use a weapon of sufficient caliber in the shooting of an intruder at his home in Knoxville, TN, in December.
The entire affair, of course, was very much tongue in cheek. Taylor had been awakened in the early morning hours of Dec. 17, 2007, when an intruder broke into his home. He investigated the noises with one of his many weapons in hand.
When the intruder threatened him with a knife, Taylor warned him, then brought his .22 caliber pistol to bear and shot him right between the eyes.
That boy had the hardest head Ive ever seen, Taylor said after his trial. The bullet bounced right off. The impact knocked the would-be thief down momentarily. He crawled out of the room then got up and ran out the door and down the street. Knoxville police apprehended him a few blocks away and he now awaits trial in the Knox County jail.
The charges against Taylor were considered to be serious. He is a retired Special Forces Weapons Sergeant with extensive combat experience during the wars in Korea and Vietnam.
Charges were brought against him under the premise that he should have saved the county and taxpayers the expense of a trial, said Chapter XXXIII President Bill Long of Asheville. He could have used a .45 or .38. The .22 just wasnt big enough to get the job done.
Taylors defense attorney, another retired Weapons Sergeant, disagreed. He said Taylor had done the right thing in choosing to arm himself with a .22.
If hed used a .45 or something like that the round would have gone right through the perp, the wall, the neighbors wall and possibly injured some innocent child asleep in its bed, he said. I believe the evidence shows that Smokey Taylor exercised excellent judgment in his choice of weapons. He did nothing wrong, and clearly remains to this day an excellent weapons man.
Counsel for the defense then floated a theory as to why the bullet bounced off the perps forehead.
He was victimized by old ammunition, he said, just as he was in Korea and again in Vietnam, when his units were issued ammo left over from World War II.
Taylor said nothing in his own defense, choosing instead to allow his peers to debate the matter. After the trial he said the ammunition was indeed old and added the new information that the perp had soiled his pants as he crawled out of the house.
I would have had an even worse mess to clean up if it had gone through his forehead, Taylor said. It was good for both of us that it didnt.
Following testimony from both sides, Taylor was acquitted of the charges and was given a round of applause.
Meanwhile, back in Knox County, the word is out: Dont go messing with Smokey Taylor. He just bought a whole bunch of fresh ammo.
Tribune Editor Bill Fishburne is a member of the Larry Thorne Chapter XXXIII of the Special Forces Association.


Smokey Taylor
James T “Smokey” Taylor, D-529, of Knoxville, TN and an original member of Chapter 33, has been nominated by the American Legion, Post #2, Knoxville, Tennessee, to serve as Grand Chef De Gare du Tennessee. This is an honor Smokey richly deserves.

NOMINATION FOR GRAND CHEF DE GARE DU TENNESSEE
WHEREAS: Voiture 353 du Tennessee has as a member in good standing a highly qualified yageur Militaire with impeccable qualifications and character, and
WHEREAS: This Voyageur Militaire has served his country honorably during the period from October 1950 to October 1970 including service in-country during the Viet Nam War (Airborne All TheWay!), and
WHEREAS: This Voyageur Militaire has served the American Legion continuously since March 1976, and has served his Post, District, and Department in many various offices to include Post Vice Commander, Commander and Adjutant, and
WHEREAS: This Voyageur Militaire has served La Societées 40 Hommes et 8 Chevaux continuously since March 1977, and has served his Voiture in every elected office to include Chef de Gare, and has served on many committees, and
WHEREAS: This Voyageur Militaire has served the Grande Voiture du Tennessee in the elected offices of Grand Cheminot and Grand Chef de Train (East), and has served on several committees, most recently as Grand Directeur POW/MIA, and
WHEREAS: As Locale Membership Directeur, this Voyageur Militaire has led Voiture 353 to two consecutive years of 100% membership, attaining 118% for the current year, now
Therefore be it resolved: Voiture 353 du Tennessee places in nomination for the high office of Grand Chef de Gare du Tennessee for the year 2003-2004 the name of Voyageur Militaire James T. Taylor.
Approved In Regularly Scheduled Promenade, held at American Legion Post # 2, Knoxville, TN, December 7th, 2002.
(signed) ERNEST W. BOLTON - Chef de Gare, V-353
WILLIAM JETT - Correspondant, V-353

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{ quote} shot him right between the eye's . For a old guy he still has the brass :D . I would be honored if he were my neighbor .
 

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Ya Gotta like the way those old Guys THINK !!!!!

About 20yrs ago when My Dad figured he was getting to old to swing a ball bat, he asked me about a 25 auto...No Way in H##L was I going to give him one of those....I got him a .380 instead for such occasions :D ...He also prefers the " Tried by 12, instead of carried by 6 " line of thinking...He's 87 now...Lou
 

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Criminals don't respect laws, not afraid of most cops, smart criminals know to stay the hell away from old soldiers!

My grandfather carried a S&W .44 SPL w/ 6" barrel, and I mean carried it everywhere, even when out on the farm. He'd seen his share of battles during WW-II, fully recovered from being gutshot twice, one tough man and most people knew not to mess with him. He always said some idiots want to trouble quiet folks, he'd made some enemies by never backing down from threats, I have no doubts he'd solved a life-threatening ordeal same as Smokey, with slightly better choice of hardware.

16 yrs since he passed, ran into a few (formerly undesireable) folks who'd threatened him almost half a lifetime ago, they say afterward they spent many yrs wondering if grandpa was going to pay them an unfriendly visit late one night, you might say they found peace with God. Funny how old soldiers can help criminals do that. ;)


Got another gray haired ex-mil friend works Meth Task Force for our area, this old Ranger was sent to capture one of my former friends, Tim was a young man who was causing a ton of trouble, he was whacked out on meth and threatened to kill cops, my old friend not only cornered Tim, he delivered an ass-whipping to boot.

We're talking a 23 yr man who was 5' 6" 210 lbs and had beaten 3-4 guys at the same time, fought for money on the street, was a well known thug and quite dangerous, gets put down by same-built guy (who was over twice his age) within 6 seconds. Tim still says "I don't know the guy that grabbed me, but THAT was one mean ol' SOB!! When I get out I want to shake his hand and be friends."

I'd say old-fashioned rehab works, the modern "PC" version will never work, our ancestors knew effective "behavior modification" programs. :D
 
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