Woman shot dead after bumping man's wheelchair
ATLANTA (AP) - An elderly man opened fire on a woman after her car came into contact with his motorized wheelchair at a central Georgia service station, authorities said Wednesday. She died shortly afterward at a hospital despite the efforts of a crowd of people to aid her.
Police said Linda Hunnicutt, 65, was driving onto the gas pump bay of the service station in Macon at about 1 p.m. Tuesday when her Buick Lucerne and the motorized wheelchair bumped. Hunnicutt stepped out of her vehicle, and the man in the motorized wheelchair pulled a handgun and fatally shot her, city police spokeswoman Jami Gaudet said.
"The whole encounter, I can tell you, was very brief," Gaudet said. "Everybody is just reeling from this."
The suspect, 73-year-old Frank Louis Reeves, was apprehended in the gas station parking lot. He made a brief court appearance Wednesday, and authorities said he was being held without bond on a murder charge at the Bibb County Jail. Gaudet did not know whether Reeves had an attorney, and jail records do not list one.
A witness, Melissa Whisby, a former state corrections officer, told The Associated Press that she stopped at the gas station right before the shooting. She said she saw Reeves back behind Hunnicutt's car, and that Hunnicutt then got out of her car and walked around to where Reeves was.
"I looked down for a minute and when I looked back she was in a kneeling position," Whisby said, adding that Hunnicutt then slid slowly to the ground and did not move. "I was like, 'Something is wrong.'"
Whisby parked her car and went to help, thinking initially that Hunnicutt was having a seizure. People who gathered placed Hunnicutt on her back and that's when they noticed blood on her chest. She said no one heard the gunshot.
As a group was working to apply pressure to the wound, someone asked who shot her. Whisby said Reeves, who sat in his wheelchair, told them Hunnicutt had tried to hit him with her car.
"It was just horrific. We were working on her the whole time, trying to give her CPR," Whisby said.
As Reeves spoke, Whisby said, "I just blocked that part out. I was too busy trying to help her. We were so focused on her that we didn't even hear the police cars."
Whisby said Wednesday she was still struggling to understand everything she witnessed.
'I thought about it all night, all day and all night. Is this really real?" Whisby said. "How can somebody just take someone's life like that and not show any emotion?"
Police have described the encounter between the victim and the suspect as random.
Hunnicutt, described as a homemaker who lives a few miles from the station, was shot once in the chest with a .38-caliber handgun, Bibb County Coroner Leon Jones said.
Reeves made a brief appearance Wednesday in Magistrate Court in Macon, and the judge set a Dec. 19 hearing, according to local news reports. Reeves, wearing an orange jumpsuit, was brought to the courtroom in a wheelchair.
Reeves lives behind the service station in one of a cluster of apartments, Jones said. No one answered a phone number listed for the residence on Wednesday, and a family member declined comment when reached by phone.
The gas station is along busy Gray Highway, and the encounter was so brief that many of the customers pumping gas were not immediately aware of what had just happened in one corner of the lot, Gaudet said.
When police arrived, Hunnicutt was in cardiac arrest and officers began performing CPR. She was taken to the Medical Center of Central Georgia, where the trauma team pronounced her dead at 1:25 p.m., less than a half-hour after the shooting.
The suspect gave a statement to detectives, Gaudet said, but authorities are not revealing what he said. Meanwhile, police were asking for the public's help in identifying additional eyewitnesses.
Hunnicutt is married, and her husband was on the road for his job with a dental lab company when the shooting happened, officials said.
Jones, who has been with the coroner's office for 22 years, said he can't recall a case such as this in the city about 80 miles southeast of Atlanta.
Said Jones: "I've never seen anything like it."
Whisby, the eyewitness, said people did what they could to try to aid the victim.
"It did not do any good, but I hope her family knows that there were some strangers there who were very concerned and trying to help her and praying for her to make it," Whisby said.
Police said Linda Hunnicutt, 65, was driving onto the gas pump bay of the service station in Macon at about 1 p.m. Tuesday when her Buick Lucerne and the motorized wheelchair bumped. Hunnicutt stepped out of her vehicle, and the man in the motorized wheelchair pulled a handgun and fatally shot her, city police spokeswoman Jami Gaudet said.
"The whole encounter, I can tell you, was very brief," Gaudet said. "Everybody is just reeling from this."
The suspect, 73-year-old Frank Louis Reeves, was apprehended in the gas station parking lot. He made a brief court appearance Wednesday, and authorities said he was being held without bond on a murder charge at the Bibb County Jail. Gaudet did not know whether Reeves had an attorney, and jail records do not list one.
A witness, Melissa Whisby, a former state corrections officer, told The Associated Press that she stopped at the gas station right before the shooting. She said she saw Reeves back behind Hunnicutt's car, and that Hunnicutt then got out of her car and walked around to where Reeves was.
"I looked down for a minute and when I looked back she was in a kneeling position," Whisby said, adding that Hunnicutt then slid slowly to the ground and did not move. "I was like, 'Something is wrong.'"
Whisby parked her car and went to help, thinking initially that Hunnicutt was having a seizure. People who gathered placed Hunnicutt on her back and that's when they noticed blood on her chest. She said no one heard the gunshot.
As a group was working to apply pressure to the wound, someone asked who shot her. Whisby said Reeves, who sat in his wheelchair, told them Hunnicutt had tried to hit him with her car.
"It was just horrific. We were working on her the whole time, trying to give her CPR," Whisby said.
As Reeves spoke, Whisby said, "I just blocked that part out. I was too busy trying to help her. We were so focused on her that we didn't even hear the police cars."
Whisby said Wednesday she was still struggling to understand everything she witnessed.
'I thought about it all night, all day and all night. Is this really real?" Whisby said. "How can somebody just take someone's life like that and not show any emotion?"
Police have described the encounter between the victim and the suspect as random.
Hunnicutt, described as a homemaker who lives a few miles from the station, was shot once in the chest with a .38-caliber handgun, Bibb County Coroner Leon Jones said.
Reeves made a brief appearance Wednesday in Magistrate Court in Macon, and the judge set a Dec. 19 hearing, according to local news reports. Reeves, wearing an orange jumpsuit, was brought to the courtroom in a wheelchair.
Reeves lives behind the service station in one of a cluster of apartments, Jones said. No one answered a phone number listed for the residence on Wednesday, and a family member declined comment when reached by phone.
The gas station is along busy Gray Highway, and the encounter was so brief that many of the customers pumping gas were not immediately aware of what had just happened in one corner of the lot, Gaudet said.
When police arrived, Hunnicutt was in cardiac arrest and officers began performing CPR. She was taken to the Medical Center of Central Georgia, where the trauma team pronounced her dead at 1:25 p.m., less than a half-hour after the shooting.
The suspect gave a statement to detectives, Gaudet said, but authorities are not revealing what he said. Meanwhile, police were asking for the public's help in identifying additional eyewitnesses.
Hunnicutt is married, and her husband was on the road for his job with a dental lab company when the shooting happened, officials said.
Jones, who has been with the coroner's office for 22 years, said he can't recall a case such as this in the city about 80 miles southeast of Atlanta.
Said Jones: "I've never seen anything like it."
Whisby, the eyewitness, said people did what they could to try to aid the victim.
"It did not do any good, but I hope her family knows that there were some strangers there who were very concerned and trying to help her and praying for her to make it," Whisby said.
HMMMM...an elderly man in a wheelchair finds it necessary to pack a gun...oh, and he used it....JJJEEEEESSSSUS what it the world coming to?!!! Â This story is appalling on a lot of levels! Â Road rage, huh?
Many times I see people in motorized chairs or scooters who are as dangerous to the public as careless skateboarders.  And of course, too many buzz around in traffic like they own the streets, similar to careless  folk on their bikes. Â
I have a little personal experience in the area since my ex Used a scooter. Â We had some stupid kid running, looking over his shoulder, actually fall over the scooter! Â He was ten. His mom was all pissed at us until I casually said, "What if instead of a scooter he had tipped over a loaded baby carriage? Â Teach you kid to look where he is going and it won't happen again." Â and that was the end of any argument from Her side. Â
Fact is, we share the road with a lot of various vehicles. Â And packing a gun while doing so is, in my opinion, asking for trouble.
What a tragic and senseless death. My heart goes out to this woman's family who must be utterly devastated by this madness. Respectfully, I disagree with many of the posts on this thread. The point isn't gun control; the point is a disturbed man took an innocent woman's life. No reasonable person would've resulted to murder; no existing law or change to an existing law would've changed this outcome.
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I wish this woman's husband and family well in their grief. Kudos to the strangers who, although unsuccessful, came to her aid and tried to save her life.
 @DeaconBugg In total agreement with what you said.
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It's not the guns that kill people - it's the wacky people that kill other people. Seriously - if we were to have a total gun ban, I highly doubt it would stop the shootings and killings that are currently happening in the drug arena. It's a right to bear arms, but it is also a necessity to do so within the realms of the law and what they are supposed to be used for.Â
Wow! That's just plain crazy. I feel so sorry for her family. No sense can ever be made of this. RIP, Linda.
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 @HarryJuku Hey! You have the right to bear arms - one on each side of your body. We all do. So let it go.Â
@HarryJuku
A homeowner in Knoxville, TN luckily grabbed his gun when he saw a man peering in his front window because just moments later two men burst through his front door and attacked him.
The homeowner managed to shoot one of the men in the chest. Both intruders fled once the shooting started.
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A store clerk in NJ refused to be a victim after a rash of store robberies in the area, some of which left clerks injured after being pistol whipped.
The clerk opened fire on two armed men who entered his store. One of the men was shot and both fled in a getaway car, driven by a third suspect.
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A homeowner in Mercer County, PA heard a loud noise coming from his back door as he was resting at home.
The homeowner started carrying a gun after his home was burglarized previously.
When the homeowner reached the back of the home he found an 18 year old man had broken in.
The homeowner drew his gun and shot the would be burglar, who fled.
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From KRJH.com: âMuskogee police say a disabled veteran shot an intruder who was trying to break into his home around 11 p.m. Saturday near Kankakee and North F Street.
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A Texas homeowner in his 60â²s was facing two burglars last night.
Fortunately, the fast thinking homeowner was armed and opened fire on both men.
Both of the would be home invaders were shot. One died in the home and the other managed to escape and make his way to an area hospital where he was arrested.
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According to WESH.com, a home invader is in stable condition at an area hospital after a gunfight with an armed homeowner.
The three men burst into the Orange County, FL home, armed with guns. Thatâs when the homeowner drew his own gun and opened fire on the suspects.
The homeowner was able to strike one of the suspects several times and the other two suspects jumped out of a second story window to escape.
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An armed robber got more than he bargained for after trying to rob a pizzeria in Indiana.
The owner at the shop drew his own weapon and shot the would be robber.
The suspect then fled the store and collapsed on the sidewalk outside.
When authorities arrived the wounded suspect was transported to an area hospital, where he died.
 @Unknown  @HarryJuku SO Unknown...where in the hell does This fit in your Justified shooting list?  For each of your examples I can cite five that were not justifiable so what the hell???  This is about an elderly man who had not business having a gun on him at the time, who used it for not damned good reason and killed someone.  Too many people who are "good people" have guns and use them in very dumb, insane, careless, and cruel ways.  We still have this old west mentality and one day, maybe, we will become a more sane nation.  I hope to heck we do not see more of This kind of action. Â
 @Unknown  @HarryJuku And don't forget the Washington home owner that shot and killed two armed home invaders, just this morning. =)
 @HarryJuku No. But I also don't want to be defenseless against those who have them illegally. We all know that it's not really the job of the police to protect us, but simply to enforce the law, without prudence, mercy or compassion, so we have to have something with which to protect ourselves. :-P
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Tell you what, Harry, if you can figure a way to get the guns out of the hands of the people who shouldn't have them, while leaving others to be able to have them if they choose, then I'm behind you 100%.
what's this parasitte doing at a gas station anyways? filling up his chair? probably soliciting
I am pro-gun with an asterisk.....I believe in the 2nd amendment as a former L.E. officer, but it also worries me at the mentality  (or mental state) of many on this page and what I hear today from some individuals who carry a firearm...."If she was carrying, maybe she could get a shot off first?"  What are we talking about here people?  Shootouts like the old west?  I believe every citizen has that right to carry "Legally", but does that mean that they have the mental state to actually know when and where a situation might arise that it is necessary to fire that weapon....for the safety of others or their own??  This tragic event is one case...another that comes to mind was when that bright individual fired at a vehicle in Gresham and tried to "shoot "out the tires, just because some kids ran out of an AT&T store with some phones...?  What is wrong with some people?  I'm amazed everyday at the utter stupidity of people.  I'll get off my soap box now.
@PD1202Â Â Â "a situation might arise that it is necessary to fire that weapon"Â Â Â Seems to me that this situation would have qualified.
 @wondering Maybe...but do you really think this lady would of come out guns a blazing?  Don't think so, she went to the back of her car to check on this moron.  Are we Quick Draw Mcgraw now?  This was a mentally unstable person with a firearm...no more, no less.
"How can somebody just take someone's life like that ..." I guess the same way somebody can just almost run over someone because they're not paying attention. He had probably had enough of today's selfish, inconsiderate attitude. Lesson: Don't almost run people over and they probably won't shoot you.
jgalt: another moronic idiot that just HAS to blame the victim. Makes me wonder if you are guilty of a violent crime and can't come to terms with your guilt so you blame your victim?
 @JGalt He probably could have got away with the self defense claim if she was still behind the steering wheel when he shot her. The problem is she was out of her car and walked around, probably to apologize and he shot her then. At that point his life was not in immediate danger.
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That being said, I get tired of drivers being blamed when pedestrians act like drivers can stop in a few feet so they can walk where they would like without consideration for other, let alone their own safety. I guess that goes back to the "Today's selfish, inconsiderate attitude". I do my best to stop and give pedestrians the right of way, but it's hard to do in a few feet and when you can't see them because they choose to wear dark clothing and not us lights in heavy rain and at night. Drivers aren't perfect and neither are pedestrians that don't take some personal responsibility.
 @JGalt Are you having difficulty understanding the distinction between a car bumping a wheelchair and a car running one over?
 @mikew  @JGalt I think you're mistaking JGalt for an intelligent individual. Most people skim articles and never get the true story behind anything, and I'm thinking that's what went on here.
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Then again, with no sympathy for the person who died for BUMPING (considering he wasn't run over, knocked over, etc) the psycho in the wheelchair... I guess I could ponder the same sort of question...
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I see a mirroring in terms of lack of emotion...
@JGalt You jerk.
 @JGalt You are an idiot!
What is the world coming to when something as slight as a bump can get you killed? Makes me never want to leave the house!
 @pdxmom It happens, but it's rare. Like the coroner who had been on the job for 22 years said,  he has never seem anything like this before.
Why does the AP feel the need to sugar coat these stories? Is it the black on white crime issue?This took place two days ago and yet,the Macon  Telegraph has reported that Hunnicutt's daughter was told by deputies that surveillance footage shows Reeves running his wheelchair into the back of her car.Even this story states Hunnicutt was "driving onto the gas pump bay of the service station" and a witness saw Reeves "behind" the car "when Hunnicut went around to see where Reeves was." This was not a case where "her car came into contact with his wheelcair" or a case "when her Buick Lucerne and the motorized wheelcair bumped."
Ah guns! The quickest way to solve everyday problems in America today. Shoot first and ask questions later! Gotta love the 2nd amendment! But the problem here was the elderly woman wasn't armed herself. If she was she might have just got off a deadly shot before she died - just like in the movies!
 @peckishpete Yep, blame the gun and not the azzhate that used the tool.
 @peckishpete Constitutionally-guaranteed civil rights can be abused and bad things result from that abuse. peckishpete's solution is to get rid of those pesky civil rights because things can get much better. With that kind of genius, peckishpete deserves a Nobel Prize! (/sarcasm)
@mikew You're right Mike. If I had my way we'd do away with the 2nd amendment. We are one of the most violent countries in the civilized world. We kill each other at a higher per capita rate than most countries regardless of whether a gun is used or not. And many in this country want everone to carry a gun. Wow! What a great idea. Any time there is any sign of trouble, pull out your gun and start shooting. Just what we need. A lot more Zimmermans in this country.Â
 @peckishpete And if I had my way you nutty anti-gun people wouldn't have 1st amendment rights.
Assuming that facts as reported in this article are accurate and that there are no "game changing" material facts omitted (both big assumptions), then the man in the wheelchair is a murderer. There is no justification whatsoever for drawing or using a firearm when there was no immediate threat to his life. (The driver had parked the car and walked back toward him - so where was the threat?)
 @mikew Bingo!!!
Here's another of those idiotic happenings where one man has destroyed a family for no reasonable reason...maybe he needed someone to take care of him and now it will be the state and tax-payers...the futile anger over a J-A like this is so angering, and with the anger a feeling of hopelessness...nothing any one person can do about this...but I sure would like to place a well-placed kick to the head....
 @KHEB Of course this never would have happened if the nut job didn't have a gun.
 @deejm2112  @KHEB Will I guess he could have been carrying a can of wasp spray and a crowbar and done the job. Spray her with the wasp spray to incapacitated her long enough to go over and slam the crowbar through her skull. Most likely he could have been quick about it and it would have been to late for bystanders to stop him in time. Heck, most bystanders weren't paying enough attention to hear the gun. If someone want's to to be violent, they don't need a gun. I don't hear any talk of banning wasp spray and crowbars.
 @deejm2112 .. with your faulty rationalizations you can assume it would be fairly simple to disarm all law-abiding citizens...but no way to get all guns out of the hands of people intent on evil-doings....think back to the last LA riots in 1992 when Reginald Denny was beaten.  The bad guys went to the next to be victim..only reason they backed off was when the guy in the car, calmly raised a gun...you wanted to cheer when the hooligans raised their hands and preceded to back away....no, gun control is not the answer.
 @oh4FS  @KHEB  @deejm2112 It's already not ok for the mentally ill to buy firearms if its known but medical privacy laws making it very difficult to find out until to late.
 @oh4FS  @KHEB  @deejm2112 It's not ok, and mentally ill people with violent histories are typically prohibited persons.
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The problem is those laws already exist, so when you come asking for more laws we know you're lying and up to no good.
 @oh4FS  @KHEB  @deejm2112 There ARE regulations as to who can legally own a firearm.  The thing is, oh4FS, laws don't keep firearms out of the hands of people who do not obey those laws.  If a person wants a gun but cannot legally own one, there are still ways to obtain said firearm.
@KHEB @deejm2112 Why is everything all or nothing with the pro gun crowd? No one said to take away all guns. What is wrong with having reasonable regulations on WHO can have a gun. Why is it ok for mentally ill people with violent histories to have firearms? Why is that OK?
All I can say is dang! It was supposed to be an innocent trip to the gas station. Ended in murder. The guy sound like a paranoid lunatic. Hope he goes away for life!
Wow, sounds like a case of a serious overreaction to me. Â However, I've found in life there are people just waiting for an excuse to unload on anyone -- especially if that anyone is convenient and unable or unwilling to put up much of a resistance/fight. Sometimes, an innocent bump can end up in a murder. Imagine if the woman had been crazed and drooling from the corners of her mouth and blasted into the gas station aimed right driving very fast right at the guy in the wheelchair. Â Would he have reached for an RPG? Â Some people are just plain paranoid.
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Sometimes I think we're digressing into a third world society.
Stand your ground! Thank you Wayne LaPierre.
 @w-t-f "Stand your ground" does not apply here because there was no immediate threat of death up to which the person in the wheelchair need to "stand." But keep up your quest to eliminate those pesky civil rights. We all know that the world will be a much nicer place without civil rights! (/sarcasm)
 @mikew  @w-t-f Yes because I want to go back to the day where the big and strong could do what they want to who they wanted. Oh wait I think that my be why they invented the gun to give everyone an equal chance...now the loonies want us to go back to the 1300's again.
Guns do not Kill people, Idiots Kill peopls.
Now if we could just outlaw Idiots.
@swede760 BUT, idiots aren't made specifically for killing like guns are.
@deejm2112 @swede760 Can we kill the idiots? That might be the way to go.
 @oh4FS @deejm2112 No we can't kill them outright and we can not legislate against them but,,,,,,,,, We can take the warning labels and signs off of everything and they should do it for us.
@swede760 If we could just outlaw "peopls" who can't spell....
 @Mechanic  @swede760 Can you make a comment today that contains any intellectual content other then catching typos, grammar and spelling errors?
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I think you are must be a retired school teacher on PERS with nothing better today then read the blogs looking for spelling and grammar errors to correct so you can feel in power again....
@swede760 OR...we could place some kind of restrictions on what kind of idiots can purchase firearms....no...we definitely can't do that....