John Hopkins Samurai(i mean Student) KILLED Intruder for STEALING his LAPTOPS and PLAYSTATION 2

Bizzare! I mean, you usually see these kinda of scene in movies, but here’s it, in reality. Well, in ancient times this incident is probably the norm, but still, it’s really bizarre.


Hours earlier, someone had broken into John Pontolillo’s house and taken two laptops and a video-game console. Now it was past midnight, and he heard noises coming from the garage out back.

The Johns Hopkins University undergraduate didn’t run. He didn’t call the police. He grabbed his samurai sword.
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With the 3- to 5-foot-long, razor-sharp weapon in hand, police say, Pontolillo crept toward the noise. He noticed a side door in the garage had been pried open. When a man inside lunged at him, police say, the confrontation was fatal.

“He was backed up against a corner and either out of fear or out of panic, he just struck the sword with force,” said Baltimore Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi. “It was probably with fear for his life.”

Pontolillo, who rents the house in the 300 block of E. University Parkway in the Oakenshawe neighborhood, struck the intruder no more than twice, police say, nearly severing his left hand and inflicting what police termed a “spear laceration.”

The intruder, Donald D. Rice of Baltimore, a 49-year-old repeat offender who had been released from jail only Saturday, died at the bloody scene.

Pontolillo, 20, of Wall, N.J., whose identity was confirmed by law enforcement sources, was released late Tuesday afternoon. Guglielmi said it would be up to the state’s attorney’s office to determine whether he will be charged in the incident.

In a statement Tuesday, Hopkins officials told students there had been more than a half-dozen burglaries in the area recently, and that police presence would be bolstered.
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Diego Ardila, a Hopkins student who lived with Pontolillo in the three-story, five-bedroom house during the summer, said Pontolillo owned a samurai sword and generally kept it in his room. He described Pontolillo as somewhat outgoing, but said they didn’t talk a lot.

“You don’t expect to hear that someone you know killed a guy with a samurai sword,” said Ardila, 19. “From what little I know of him, he wasn’t some guy going out to kill.”

It is legal to possess a sword in Baltimore, Guglielmi said, and “individuals have a right to defend their person and their property.” He declined to comment on whether its use in this case was appropriate.

University of Maryland professor David Gray, who specializes in criminal law, said prosecutors must weigh whether Pontolillo felt his life was in danger or whether he became the aggressor.

In Maryland, Gray said, an individual is not expected to retreat from suspected danger in his own home. But it is unclear how the law applies to an enclosed backyard.

If the student felt he was in danger of severe bodily harm, then he was within his right to protect himself, Gray said: “It doesn’t matter if he used a gun, a sword or a frying pan.”
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The sword police recovered from the scene, with a sharp blade and ribbon-wrapped hilt, is a replica of a historic samurai weapon. Though a real one would cost thousands of dollars, Guglielmi said, this one probably cost a few hundred.

The police spokesman said the student who wielded the weapon had no advanced sword training. “He wasn’t a ninja,” Guglielmi said. “He may have been moderately trained or on the intermediate level.”

Hundreds of varieties of samurai swords are available online to collectors and hobbyists, martial arts enthusiasts and students of swordplay through stores such as Steve Dibble’s Japanese Swords 4 Samurai site, based in Birmingham, Ala.

His swords range in price from about $50 for the model called the “Kill Bill,” after the violent Quentin Tarantino films, to more than $2,000 for a handmade “Katana” forged of steel, a hilt wrapped in leather and silk, and decorative flourishes of silver.

Midrange swords, the type apparently used in the Baltimore incident, are those likeliest used at martial arts schools, he said, where students want a weapon sharp enough to cut.

To inflict lethal damage requires some skill, Dibble said.

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“To be that confident with it that he would go grab it, he may have been into martial arts,” he said. “You would have to hold it with two hands and be confident that you would really know what you were doing.”

Mantis Swords, an online outlet based in Westminster, specializes in sharp weapons. “Our swords are ready for cutting,” owner Shawn Salafia said.

Salafia sells mats that people can soak in water so that when they dry, they’ll be roughly the consistency of a person.

“You stick them on a stand, and you cut them,” he said. “If someone laid their hand into it, you could probably cut into it pretty darn deep.”

By Tuesday afternoon, two pools of blood remained on the ground a few feet away from the door to the garage, which is not connected to the home. A gate in a wooden fence surrounding the backyard was broken, allowing the scene to be viewed from the sidewalk.

Michael Hughes, who lives about a block away in the neighborhood, heard screams early Tuesday.

“I could hear the fear in the voice, and I could tell someone was scared,” said Hughes, 43, who works for Johns Hopkins’ Bloomberg School of Public Health.

He called police and then walked over to the crime scene.

“The body was near the garage,” he said. “I watched them carry the sword out. The whole thing was surreal and totally bizarre.”

Rice, of the 600 block of East 27th St. in Baltimore, had 29 prior convictions for crimes such as breaking and entering, Guglielmi said. He had been released Saturday from the Baltimore County Detention Center, where he had been held after his arrest by county police last year for stealing a car in the city. He was found guilty in December of unauthorized removal of property and was sentenced to 18 months in prison.

The incident was the second this week in which a man was wounded trying to commit a robbery. An off-duty Baltimore police officer shot and critically wounded a man who had tried to rob him at gunpoint in his Northeast Baltimore home, according to police. He chased the man for two blocks before opening fire, police said.

[Article from Baltimore Sun]
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Yeah, don’t mess with a student samurai.

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    3 Comments

    1. Posted September 20, 2009 at 8:20 pm | Permalink

      Woohoo … dat person who killed the burglar sure have the guts !!! Another bad guy down …

      [Reply]

    2. Harunaka Hoshino
      Posted February 15, 2010 at 10:37 am | Permalink

      Since there was a human being killed, I give the strong condolences to the deceased person’s family.

      Human beings were slaughtered by such blades during the Sengoku Era ( Japanese Civil Wartime: 1467 – 1591 ); however, this is the modern age, the 21st Century. Therefore, in this era, nobody should be killed by the sword or sword-related weapon. We should not glorify any type of killing for the respect of the deceased person.

      A message from a practitioner & Sensei of Tameshi-giri ( Test cutting ) and Ken-jitsu ( Japanese sword fighting skills ) in San Francisco, California

      [Reply]

    3. Kharn
      Posted March 25, 2010 at 1:20 pm | Permalink

      IMO as humanity alone we have scooped so very very very very low in decentcy and morals to the point where IMO (in my opinion) we SHOULD/MUST punish criminal to not the full extent of the law but BEYOND atm (at the moment) criminals really do get a slap on the wrist how many convictions did this criminal have….29priors LOL and one of the reasons he commited so many crimes is because he KNEW that it would just be another slap on the wrist IF he got caught, so as far as I am concerned let him be an example of what should happen, sure its bad to encourage death or the act of killing but the world is SOOOOOOO messed up that examples MUST be made for us to get back on track we MUST penalise criminals to the point of INHUMANITY bring back TORTURE for all I care the Idea is to put the FEAR in the criminal so they say to themselves “F**K going out and commiting X crime from now on I don’t want to be put to death…” but like this will ever EVER happen, so we rely on the public to do it in these situations :D

      [Reply]

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