With gun crime so frequent in the United States these days, even making
a gun gesture with your hand can put some people on edge. A Pennsylvania
man found that out the hard way after being charged with disorderly
conduct for pointing a “finger gun” at another man during an argument.
The bizarre incident took place in June 2018, when, according to
surveillance footage, 64-year-old Stephen Kirchner was walking with his
girlfriend on a street in Manor Township, Pennsylvania. The woman
reportedly had a no contact order against one of her neighbors, and when
the couple walked by the neighbor’s residence, Kirchner stopped, turned
around, formed a finger gun with his thumb and forefinger, pointed it at
the neighbor and pulled the imaginary trigger. Little did he know that
the gesture would lead to a year-long litigation.
The 64-year-old’s finger gun was apparently so disturbing to bystanders
in the area that some of them actually called the police about it. To
make matters worse, the neighbor he pointed he finger gun at later told
police that he had felt “extremely threatened” by the gesture. Kirchner
himself admitted that he knew his gesture would only inflame tensions,
but he later learned that it was actually a crime.
|
|
“I’m 64 years old, never had of anything not even a traffic ticket,”
Stephen Kirchner told reporters, adding that he was only sticking up for
his girlfriend, and that his gesture was a response to the neighbor
showing them the middle finger with both hands.
“The bar has now been lowered for what constitutes disorderly conduct,”,
Kirchner’s girlfriend, Elaine Keeno, added.
“And he pointed his finger out like he was going to shoot somebody. So I
went and called the cops cause you just don’t know now a days,” the
person who noticed Kirchner’s finger gun pointing at his girlfriend’s
neighbor and later called the police, said.
|
|
Last year, county Judge Howard F. Knisely found that Kirchner’s act
wasn’t harmless, arguing that it “created a hazardous condition”.
Kirchner faced disorderly conduct charges and appealed to the
Pennsylvania Superior Court where the original ruling was recently
upheld.
The Superior Court panel agreed that the man’s finger gun gesture had
created a situation that made a bystander call the police and ordered
Kirchner to pay a $100 fine and court costs.
|