HOUSTON (KTRK) -- For the first time, a Pasadena homeowner is talking about the case that Houstonians can't stop talking about.
Joe Horn is remarkably candid about the ordeal. He says he had trouble sleeping last night, apprehensive about talking publicly about the incident for the first time.
Horn shot and killed two men who he believed were stealing from his neighbor's home in Pasadena last November. He called 911 from inside his home, telling a dispatcher that he had a gun, that he intended not to let the men get away.
Horn ignored the dispatcher's demands to stay inside his home and instead took his shotgun out into his front yard. Horn says he was confronted there by the two suspected burglars, that one actually charged him. Autopsies revealed that both Diego Ortiz and Hernando Torres were shot in the back.
"But in reality, when he rushed me, just before I fired, he made a turn. So I got him into the side. It happened very fast," said Horn to Good Morning America's Diane Sawyer this morning. "When you're confronted, when somebody rushes you, you've already told him not to move, you know that you must shoot or you're gonna be dead."
Horn insists that he feared for his life, that he is the not the vigilante some have concluded he is. He also says he is no hero.
"If we could clear the air on that, Joe Horn is no hero and I know that for a fact," said Horn. "He was scared and he was going to, had to do something that is horrible, to save his life."
"Nobody wants to do something like this, nobody," he continued.
He says he deserves no accolades, and similarly, no scorn for what he did. He says this incident has changed his life forever.
Meanwhile, the families of the men shot and killed by Horn say they're still waiting for justice. Hernando Torres' fiancee was joined by black community leaders at a news conference yesterday Both she and Diego Ortiz's common-law wife tell us they are exploring their legal options.
A protest is being planned for next week outside the district attorney's office and activists also want to see if changes can be made to Castle Doctrine, the state law that shielded Horn from criminal indictment.
Headlines at a glance | News in your community | RSS feeds
Slideshow archive | ABC13 wireless | Help solve crimes
local, kevin quinn
Recently Published
Sponsored Content
- Police: Murder victim found dumped in creek 5 min ago
- Doctor: man may have been in Haiti rubble 27 days
- Stalker of ESPN's Andrews had other victims
- Woman found dead inside her home 25 min ago
- Good times roll at Saints victory parade
- Bus driver suspended after light rail collision 21 min ago
- Suspect pulls gun on animal control officer 33 min ago
- Man accused of shooting friend several times 1 min ago
- Honda adds 437,000 cars to global air bag recall 24 min ago
- ATF increases reward in church arson fires
2.

- Your 5am Eyewitness News webcast
30 min ago
-
Most Popular
-
Most Viewed StoriesMost Viewed VideoMost Viewed Photos
ABC13 Everywhere
Wireless
Breaking news as it happens. Sign up now!
Visit our mobile site at abc13now.com.
Get our iPhone application.
Newsletters, Alerts, and RSS
Sign up for our newsletters to get news, weather and other alerts via email.
Get breaking news alerts on your desktop
With our RSS feeds, get real-time updates of abc13.com using your favorite news reader.
Follow us on Twitter!
Contests, Promotions, and Registration
Check out our contests and promotions. There are always great opportunities to win!
Become a member to enter contests, comment on stories, receive newsletters, and more!
- abc13.com home
- Site Map
- RSS
- Advertise with Us
- Contact Us
- DTV Reports
- Technical Help
- ABC.com
- ABCNews.com
- Privacy Policy
- Safety Information for this site
- Terms of Use
- Copyright ©2010 ABC Inc., KTRK-TV/DT Houston, TX. All Rights Reserved.




