Georgia

  • Marine Veteran Stops Armed Attacker at Leesburg Family Reunion After Gunfire Exchange

    Marine Veteran Stops Armed Attacker at Leesburg Family Reunion After Gunfire Exchange

    A family reunion in Leesburg, Georgia, was disrupted by a sudden outbreak of violence on Sunday, June 7, 2026, when an assailant opened fire on people gathered for the event. What began as a private, peaceful get-together quickly became an active-shooter situation.

    Authorities described the assault as a racially motivated ambush carried out with a rifle. The attacker was later identified as Jeffrey Tyler Kinzer. Reports indicate he was wearing body armor while firing an AR-15 during the incident.

    Among those at the reunion was Ramell Green, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran. As shots were fired, Green drew a defensive handgun and responded, exchanging fire with the rifleman rather than waiting helplessly for the attack to continue.

    Despite the gunman’s body armor and rifle, Green’s return fire struck Kinzer and stopped his ability to continue the assault. Kinzer was hit, incapacitated, and the immediate threat to the gathering was brought under control.

    The incident has renewed attention on the practical value of firearms training and lawful armed self-defense, especially when violence erupts without warning. In this case, a prepared citizen with military experience acted decisively at the moment it mattered, preventing a deadly situation from escalating further.

  • Georgia Groom Aaron White Has Charges Dropped in 2024 Wedding-Night Shooting of Bride’s Stepfather

    Georgia Groom Aaron White Has Charges Dropped in 2024 Wedding-Night Shooting of Bride’s Stepfather

    Prosecutors in Henry County, Georgia, have ended the criminal case against Aaron White, the groom who was accused of fatally shooting his bride’s stepfather on the night of their wedding in 2024. The murder and aggravated assault counts filed against White have been formally dismissed, bringing the prosecution to a close.

    The man who died was identified as Jason Maughon, the bride’s stepfather. White’s legal defense centered on self-defense, and that claim became the key issue the state would have needed to overcome to continue pursuing a conviction.

    The Henry County District Attorney’s office, which assumed control of the matter after allegations of forensic misconduct under the prior administration, reviewed the evidence and the posture of the case. After taking over, prosecutors concluded the available proof did not allow them to move forward on the charges under the required legal standards.

    According to the prosecutors’ assessment, they could not negate White’s claim that he acted to protect himself. They also determined they could not establish beyond a reasonable doubt that White was the primary aggressor in the confrontation, a finding that undercut the state’s ability to prove the criminal allegations in court.

    With the dismissal now entered, White is no longer facing the murder and aggravated assault charges stemming from the wedding-night shooting. The decision underscores how, in a case involving a self-defense assertion, the government must meet a high burden of proof—and when that burden cannot be met, charges should not proceed.