Mook Gets What He Deserves
I received one of my favorite mags in the mail yesterday, and it had a good story in it about a woman from Michigan who took care of a mook …who just happened to be her husband.
What she did was shoot him once in the chest to get his attention, and then when he failed that test, she put a couple of rounds in his head, which sort of ended the whole brouhaha.
According to the report in the mag, the two lovebirds had a “tempestuous” relationship, and police had been called to their home on numerous previous occassions to break up domestic tiffs.
On the occassion of the mook’s demise, the wife had recently returned from work at a retail business she owned and operated when her husband/mook assaulted her. She was in the living room when the mook/husband came in and started removing his clothes to take off his belt. He then put the belt around her neck and started to choke her.
The mook/husband then pushed the wife up the stairs with the belt around her neck while he retrieved a firearm. When he pointed his gun at his wife, he told her he was going to kill her.
The wife then drew her .38 caliber Roscoe Revolver from her fanny pack, (I missed the word “pack” the first time), and fired, planting a slug in her mook/husband’s chest. Apparently this pissed the husband/mook off, and he threatened to kill her again, raising his gun. The wife then put some lead in his head, and dat…as they say…was dat.
The prosecutor’s office has declined to charge the wife, saying she acted in self defense, and police reports support her version of the events.
Well…if that ain’t a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year story I don’t know what is. Yowza!
Most of the time I would say that a Big Kahuna tool would do the trick, and has, in hundreds of cases. A good blast of Wildfire to the face, or voltage to the nutz is enough to back most mooks off. But when they already have a gun, and have shown a proclivity to use it, or threaten with it, then you have to match firepower with more firepower, which is what happened here, to the dearly, and now departed.
(RIPMF)
http://www.bigkahunasecurity.com/wildfire.htm
Protect your right to keep and bear arms, whether it be a Big Kahuna tool, or a game stopper.
Stay aware, alert, and have a plan.
Aloha kaua,
Nui (Big) Kahuna




















