There appears to me more to the story:
[i]Fleming related Saturday afternoon’s events to Foster’s on Monday, saying it began when he arrived at his 1826 farmhouse, which has been in his family for decades, at approximately 1:45 p.m. and found drawers opened and his belongings scattered around the house.
He said he couldn’t tell right away if anything from his home was missing, and that after about 10 or 15 minutes of checking his house for damage and stolen items, he noticed a man walking down the street with a backpack.
“I said, ‘That can’t be him,’” Fleming said Monday, but decided to see if it was, driving his truck down the road.
After he did not find the man, Fleming said he went back to his house, grabbed his gun, and decided to walk down the street to talk with neighbors and find out if they had seen anyone suspicious in the area.
It was on this walk that he saw the man with the backpack, later identified to be Hebert, again, coming out of a neighbor’s back window.
“I heard, ‘Crash, bang boom!’, and he came flying out the back window,” Fleming said. It was later determined Hebert had left Fleming’s house in a similar fashion, jumping from a second-story window about 15 feet down to the ground.
What happened next Fleming said was a result of him acting on an instinct to not only stop the man, but protect himself.
“I had drawn my gun … I had a bypass last year, I have a bad knee, bad back, I don’t want this guy to come at me,” he said Monday. “I yelled, ‘Freeze!’ and fired my gun into the ground.”[/i]
http://www.fosters.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20120221/GJNEWS_01/702219939/-1/FOSNEWS
Initially I thought that he noticed his place was broken into, looked out and saw the guy coming out of another house. It turns out he spent about 10-15 minutes in his house, took off looking for the guy in his truck, returned home got his gun and then went out on foot and then spotted the guy coming out of someone’s house.
He would have been better off not talking too the local newspaper.