Current:Home > FinanceA shooting over pizza delivery mix-up? Small mistakes keep proving to be dangerous in USA. -WealthSpot
A shooting over pizza delivery mix-up? Small mistakes keep proving to be dangerous in USA.
View
Date:2025-04-17 10:29:27
A teen pizza delivery driver who was shot at about seven times by a Tennessee homeowner earlier this week is the latest in a long string of victims whose only mistake was being at the wrong place.
The 18-year-old Domino's driver said he accidentally parked in the wrong driveway while delivering pizza next door, when he saw a man running at him and shooting, according to court documents. Ryan Babcock, 32, was charged with aggravated assault and said he thought someone was breaking into his truck.
The teen wasn't struck by the bullets, but in several other shootings across the country, people accidentally in the wrong place have been injured or killed when they were shot at.
Experts previously told USA TODAY that these kinds of wrong-place, wrong-time shootings aren't surprising in a society awash with guns.
This kind of shooting has plagued the country for decades, with a spate of them making national headlines last year. In April 2023, a Black teen who rang the wrong doorbell, a 20-year-old woman who was riding in a car that pulled into the wrong driveway, and a cheerleader who opened the wrong car door were all shot.
"People are constantly told to be scared and to use guns to defend themselves, so we shouldn’t be shocked when this happens," UCLA law professor Adam Winkler told USA TODAY last year.
Americans keep getting shot at over small mistakes
Earlier this week, the family of Ralph Yarl, the Black teen who was shot in the head and arm when he rang the wrong doorbell while picking up his sibling in Kansas City, Missouri, filed a lawsuit against the white homeowner who shot him. Yarl was 16 at the time and suffered a traumatic brain injury after being shot April 13, 2023, the suit says. Andrew Lester, 85, still faces first-degree assault and armed criminal action charges.
Yarl's shooting put a nationwide spotlight on so-called "stand your ground" laws, which deal with the use of deadly force in self-defense. It also sparked a conversation about racial bias in a country with so many guns and what gun control experts and advocates call a shoot-first mentality.
The situation has played out several times in the last few decades:
- On April 15, 2023, 20-year-old Kaylin Gillis was riding in a car in rural upstate New York with three other people when the driver mistakenly turned onto the property of Kevin Monahan, who was 65 at the time. Monahan fired shots at the car, killing Gillis. Monahan was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison earlier this year.
- Also in April 2023, two Texas cheerleaders were shot after practice when one of them mistakenly opened the wrong car door, thinking it was hers. Heather Roth told news outlets she got back into her friend's car, but the person who was in the other car got out and shot at them. Both were injured, and Pedro Tello Rodriguez Jr. was charged with deadly conduct.
- In 2018, then 14-year-old Brennan Walker said he missed his school bus and got lost when he tried walking the route, so he knocked on a door to ask for directions. Instead of directions, he got a woman yelling at him and her husband, Jeffrey Zeigler, firing shots that missed him. The couple said they thought he was breaking in, but Walker and his family said they believed the shooting was racially motivated.
- In 2013, 22-year-old Roger Diaz was killed after GPS took him and his friends to the wrong address while they were headed to a friend's house. Gunman Phillip Sailors was sentenced to a year of probation and a fine after pleading guilty to manslaughter.
- The 1992 death of Yoshihiro Hattori, a 16-year-old Japanese exchange student, caused reverberations around the world. The teen, dressed in a white tuxedo, went to the wrong house while looking for the address of a Halloween party. Rodney Peairs said he thought Hattori's camera was a weapon and shot in self-defense. Peairs was found not guilty of manslaughter, the Washington Post reported in 1993.
Though self-defense laws seek to deter violent crime, researchers in a 2020 report found no evidence of lower rates of violent crime with these laws in place. In some cases, the broadening of "stand your ground" laws and "castle doctrine" laws — which remove a person's duty to first try to retreat before using deadly force against an intruder — were linked to increasing violent crime and racial bias.
Tennessee, where the pizza delivery driver was shot at, has such a law that "removes the duty to retreat before using deadly force in self-defense when a person is not engaged in unlawful activity and is in a place where a person has a right to be," according to the gun control advocacy group Giffords Law Center, which tracks gun laws around the country.
Contributing: Terry Collins, Natalie Neysa Alund and Thao Nguyen, USA TODAY
veryGood! (498)
Related
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- ‘Stop Cop City’ activists arrested after chaining themselves to bulldozer near Atlanta
- 3 sailors rescued after sharks attack and partially destroy their inflatable boat off Australian coast
- The 27 Most-Loved Wedding Gifts from Amazon With Thousands of 5-Star Reviews
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Disney+ deal: Stream service $1.99 monthly for 3 months. Watch 'Ashoka,' 'Little Mermaid' and more
- How to watch the U.S. Open amid Disney's dispute with Spectrum
- I Tried the Haus Labs Concealer Lady Gaga Says She Needs in Her Makeup Routine
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Phoenix poised to break another heat record
Ranking
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Australia and China open their first high-level dialogue in 3 years in a sign of a slight thaw
- 'That '70s Show' actor Danny Masterson sentenced to 30 years to life in prison for 2 rapes
- Texas AG Ken Paxton’s impeachment trial defense includes claims of a Republican plot to remove him
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Slave descendants on Georgia island face losing protections that helped them keep their land
- Why No. 3 Alabama will need bullies or a magician for its showdown against No. 10 Texas
- Felony convictions for 4 ex-Navy officers vacated in Fat Leonard bribery scandal
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Everyone’s talking about the Global South. But what is it?
This meteorite is 4.6 billion years old. Here's what it could reveal about Earth's creation
Voting online is very risky. But hundreds of thousands of people are already doing it
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Historic flooding event in Greece dumps more than 2 feet of rain in just a few hours
Kendra Wilkinson Goes to Emergency Room After Suffering Panic Attack
US announces new $600 million aid package for Ukraine to boost counteroffensive