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Man Killed In East Hartford Robbery

One Of Two Perpetrators Fatally Shot By Employee At Main Street Pawn Shop

By CHRISTINE DEMPSEY And INDRANEEL SUR
Courant Staff Writers

November 21, 2001

EAST HARTFORD -- An employee at a Main Street pawn shop fatally shot one of two masked men
during a botched robbery Tuesday evening.

Bill Kane fired the shots after the robber, armed with a pipe, approached him and would not
heed his warnings that he had a gun, said Tom Tinney, the owner of Tom's pawn shop at 1100
Main St. A second robber, who attacked Kane's co-worker, fled when the shots were fired,
police and Tinney said.

The second robber was chased by an officer and his police dog, who lost him on nearby Rector
Street. He was still being sought late Tuesday night.

No charges are expected to be filed against Kane, a police spokesman said. The shooting was
the third violent death on Main Street within the past two months.

About 5:30 p.m., Kane was working in the rear section of the shop and his co-worker, Ralph
Lane, was handling wares at a jewelry repair workbench in the front of the store. It was a
time of day when rush hour traffic typically streams along Main Street.

Without warning, two men armed with metal pipes entered the store, said Tinney, 70, who had
been at a doctor's appointment at the time and learned of the episode later from the two
employees.

The "two perps came in swinging pipes, yelling, `Open the safe!'" Tinney said, referring to
the masked men. "They were hitting the cases and hitting everything with their pipes."

When one of the robbers hit him, Lane managed to trigger a burglar alarm, summoning the
police. At the same time, another robber moved toward the back of the store to confront Kane,
Tinney said.

Kane, an Army veteran, drew a .380 mm pistol, for which he has a permit. He warned the robber
that he was armed.

"Mr. Kane told him that he had a gun, but [the robber] kept coming like he didn't believe it
or was crazed up on dope," Tinney said.

Kane "emptied seven shots," Tinney said, and "two of them hit one of the perps." Startled at
the gunfire, Lane's attacker fled. Tinney said it wasn't clear whether the man who fled was
wounded.

That man ran north on Main Street and east on Rector Street, with Officer John Zavalick and
his police dog, Raven, in pursuit. They lost the man on Rector Street, police spokesman Hugo
Benettieri said.

The robber is described as about 5 feet 9 inches tall, with a slim build. He was wearing a
gray sweat shirt, a gray hood and dark-colored jeans, Benettieri said.

As police chased the second man, paramedics rushed the wounded man from the store and brought
him to Hartford Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

"I saw him come out and they were pumping him and stuff," said a 12-year-old who walked past
the chaotic scene.

Lane refused to seek medical treatment for his injuries Tuesday night.

"He's got a pretty big knot on his arm," and also suffered a blow to his back, Tinney said.

Through Tinney, Kane declined comment.

"Mr. Kane is just terrible torn up," Tinney said. "That's why he doesn't want to talk about
it."

Benettieri said Kane's actions appear to have been in self-defense.

Detectives remained at the store into the night, and officers canvassed the downtown
neighborhood. Customers of a neighboring Chinese restaurant - some with young children -
anxiously walked past the crime scene tape to get their meals.

Dinner in hand, Trina Roller guided her 4-year-old, Austen Pena, away from the scene, where a
bullet had punched a hole in the store's plate glass and a pipe lay on the sidewalk.

"It's scary," she said. "I would have freaked if we were in there when it happened," she said
of the restaurant.

Tuesday's shooting was the third violent death downtown in the past two months.

On Nov. 9, the body of 54-year-old Diane Johnson was found in a rooming house above the
Sports Page Cafe at 860 Main St. An autopsy showed she died of cranial cerebral trauma, the
result of a homicide. No arrest has been made.

On Oct. 1, the body of Michael Alfred Owen was discovered in a room at the Town Hall Inn,
which is at 1112 Main St., just a few doors away from Tom's. An autopsy revealed Owen had
been killed by blunt force trauma to the head.

Two days later, police arrested Mark Johnson, 46, who lived at the same rooming house, and
charged him with murder and third-degree larceny.

Tinney opened the nearby pawn shop about five years ago. Because his business deals in
antique coins, stamps and other valuables, and because he is a jeweler by trade, he said, he
is used to taking precautions such as having armed workers and a burglar alarm system.

"In this type of business almost everybody has a gun on the premises," he said.

Tuesday was not Tinney's first encounter with crime at the store. "We've had snatch-and-runs
before. We've had a couple of big expensive things taken away," he said.

Tinney said he and his workers would not let Tuesday's events stop them from carrying on
their business. "If you were to have a bad automobile accident tonight, God forbid, and
somebody was killed whether it was your fault or not," what would be the outcome, he asked.
His answer was, "You don't stop driving."

Courant Staff Writers Jim Farrell and David Owens contributed to this story.
Copyright 2001, Hartford Courant

 

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