Log in

View Full Version : Student Kills Intruder with Samurai Sword


Neverender
September 17th, 2009, 02:18 PM
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-city/bal-sword0915,0,4027961.story
Student Kills Intruder with Samurai Sword
Intruder was repeat offender, released from prison Saturday

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.

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.

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."

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.

tripolar
September 17th, 2009, 03:47 PM
This guy better not get charged for the killing, the intruder was in the student's house and he struck the intruder and killed him. He was probably thinking the guy who broke in might have a gun or a knife and lunged at him.

Sage
September 17th, 2009, 05:23 PM
That is fucking awesome. I personally would've picked up my saber, though, it's sharper than any replica katana I could get my hands on.

Bougainvillea
September 17th, 2009, 06:09 PM
I have a knife...?
And a golf club.

But anyway.
I would attack someone coming into my home.

Modus Operandi
September 17th, 2009, 08:10 PM
Ha, thats awesome. He definetly shouldn't be charged, this was clear cut(:P) self defense.

sebbie
September 17th, 2009, 08:26 PM
Personally I think that we have a right to protect out property and family with force, if the situation requires it.

If he acted with that in mind then he is able to justify his actions.

Rainstorm
September 17th, 2009, 08:42 PM
I agree with everyone that he shouldn't be charged, because it was self defense.

The Joker
September 17th, 2009, 09:21 PM
People on Skype know that I usually grab a knife when I'm paranoid.

OneManArmy
September 17th, 2009, 10:40 PM
Props to the guy. I'd be a pussy and hide. And I do see this as self defense, hope he doesn't get charged.

AllThatIsLeft
September 17th, 2009, 11:49 PM
Well I cant imagine me grabbing my katana O.o
but kudos

RaeNose
September 18th, 2009, 12:58 AM
My question is....he grabbed the samurai sword? There's no gun or baseball hat that he could've had easier access to?
I know he shouldn't be charged, and I give props to the guy (I probably would've screamed and ran), but that is just... strange.

mrmcdonaldduck
September 18th, 2009, 01:28 AM
if someone came into my house stealing stuff, i wouldnt invite him to tea, i would get him to meet my cricket bat.

Sage
September 18th, 2009, 01:36 AM
My question is....he grabbed the samurai sword? There's no gun or baseball hat that he could've had easier access to?
I know he shouldn't be charged, and I give props to the guy (I probably would've screamed and ran), but that is just... strange.

Though it was just a replica, the katana is the most sophisticated and deadly sword ever created.

RaeNose
September 18th, 2009, 08:41 AM
Ok. True. I'm still in awe of that whole ordeal though.

Pioneer92
September 20th, 2009, 08:15 AM
good for him. and wow, the burglar was caught, arrested and released and then went ahead to commit more crimes? I hope he got the point that crime hurts