Permit holder saves family of 4 that man was shooting at

Jul 27, 2015 | Featured

mccary

Thomas McCary (Hamilton County sheriff’s office)

Fox 19 in Cincinnati, Ohio originally reported this story from Winton Hills, Ohio.  Fox News has this:

[Thomas] McCary [62-years-old] was arguing with a woman around 8 p.m. Sunday night and, when the woman’s brother, Patrick Ewing, approached, McCary pulled out a .38-caliber handgun and fired three shots at him, Cincinnati police said.

Ewing didn’t get hit, but he did get his own gun and returned fire, wounding McCary in the leg. Ewing had a permit to carry a concealed weapon.

Injured, McCary went into his house to get a second gun and, holding a weapon in each hand, he fired three shots in the direction of the woman, Jeaneta Walker, her 1-year-old son and a third man.

Ewing fired at McCary again to try to distract him as the victims fled indoors. McCary squeezed off a few more rounds, hitting no one, before withdrawing into his apartment, Cincinnati.com reported. . . .

Fortunately, because of Patrick Ewing’s quick actions, no one was seriously injured.

johnrlott

1 Comment

  1. Michael Ring

    Great. Another Cincinnati neighborhood gone to hell. And the City wonders why they’ve lost 47% of their population.

Categories

Archives

Younger and more liberal Americans are much more likely to think political violence can be justified. Very liberal Americans are 8.3 times more likely than very conservatives to say it. 18 to 29 year olds are 6.67 times more likely than those 65+.

Younger and more liberal Americans are much more likely to think political violence can be justified. Very liberal Americans are 8.3 times more likely than very conservatives to say it. 18 to 29 year olds are 6.67 times more likely than those 65+.

A September 2025 survey by YouGov show that while 11 percent of Americans adults think that violence by citizens to achieve political goals can be justified, the results vary dramatically by age and political ideology. Twenty-five percent of those who classified...

Likely voters by more than a 2-to-1 rate want the SAVE Act passed, Overwhelmingly believe on U.S. citizens who’ll be allowed to vote, and believe non-citizens are illegally registered to vote

Likely voters by more than a 2-to-1 rate want the SAVE Act passed, Overwhelmingly believe on U.S. citizens who’ll be allowed to vote, and believe non-citizens are illegally registered to vote

Screenshot The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey (May 10 to 12, 2026 of 1,060 likely voters) found voters strongly support the SAVE Act—which would require proof of U.S. citizenship to register for federal elections— by a 63% to 30% margin,...