Texas Father Shoots and Kills Carjacker During Nearly Minute-Long Struggle With Family of Eight Inside Vehicle

Key Takeaways
- A father in Garland shot and killed a carjacker while his family was inside the vehicle, in what police deem self-defense.
- The suspect had crashed into multiple cars and attempted to forcibly enter several vehicles before reaching the family’s car.
- Despite not having a weapon, the suspect’s aggressive behavior justified the father’s response, according to Texas self-defense laws.
- The incident highlights the importance of responsible armed citizens being prepared for violent encounters.
- Law enforcement supports the father’s actions, illustrating the recognition of lawful self-defense in such high-stakes situations.
Estimated reading time: 6 minutes
GARLAND, TX — A father in Garland shot and killed a man who attempted to carjack his vehicle Sunday afternoon while the rest of his family of eight, including a baby, was still inside. Garland police do not expect to file charges and have characterized the shooting as self-defense.
According to FOX 4 News reporting and statements from the Garland Police Department, the incident happened in a parking lot near Highway 66 and Dairy Road on Sunday, May 3, 2026. The encounter was captured on surveillance video.
The Suspect’s Behavior Before the Shooting
Garland Police Department Lt. Pedro Barineau told FOX 4 that the suspect first crashed his vehicle into two other cars in the area. After the crash, the suspect exited his vehicle and immediately began physically trying to get into other vehicles in the parking lot.
Tatiana Starks, who manages Garland Smoke and Vape in a nearby shopping center, witnessed the suspect’s behavior firsthand. She told FOX 4 she heard the initial crash, then saw the man attempting to break into multiple vehicles at a gas station and recorded cell phone footage of his behavior.
“You could definitely tell that he was not in his right state of mind,” Starks said. “He like tried to get in several different cars.”
Starks stopped recording when the suspect began walking across the street toward her, making direct eye contact and moving with intent. The suspect then moved on and approached the family’s vehicle.
The Carjacking Attempt
The family of eight was unaware of what was happening until the suspect reached their car. Surveillance video shows the suspect, wearing a peach colored shirt, confronting the father, who was wearing a white shirt.
The suspect entered the driver’s seat of the family’s vehicle and attempted to drive away with family members still inside, including a baby. The father struggled with him for nearly a full minute. Throughout the struggle, the carjacker remained behind the wheel attempting to take the vehicle while the father fought to stop him.
After roughly a minute of struggle, the father, who was outside the vehicle near the passenger side door, shot the carjacker in the driver’s seat. The suspect was transported to a hospital and pronounced dead.
No one in the family was injured.
The Police Assessment
Lt. Barineau told FOX 4 that the shooting appeared to be self-defense.
“It seemed to be self-defense,” Barineau said. “It kind of all happened really fast.”
Police did not recover any weapons from the suspect at the scene. Lt. Barineau emphasized that this did not change the analysis.
According to FOX 4, police say that while the suspect did not have a weapon, he was absolutely using force to try to steal multiple vehicles, and at the moment of the shooting, the father had no way of knowing whether the suspect was armed.
Investigators are still working to identify the deceased suspect.
More from USA Carry:
Why This Case Matters for Armed Citizens
This is why we carry. This is exactly the scenario that responsible armed Americans prepare for, and the outcome here is the best one available given the circumstances.
A man behaving erratically had already crashed into multiple cars and was actively attempting to break into vehicles in a parking lot in broad daylight. He approached a family of eight in their own car, forced his way into the driver’s seat, and tried to drive off with the children, including a baby, still inside. The father had to make decisions in real time about how to stop a stranger from driving away with his family.
The legal standard for the use of deadly force in Texas is reasonable belief of imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm. A stranger attempting to drive off with your children at high speed, while you are physically attached to the vehicle in a struggle, meets that standard by any reasonable reading. The fact that the suspect did not turn out to be armed is legally irrelevant. What matters is what the father reasonably believed in the moment, and what a reasonable person would have believed faced with the same circumstances.
A child being forcibly transported away from a parent at the hands of a stranger acting erratically is an active kidnapping in progress. The threat of serious bodily harm to those children was not theoretical.
The Pro-2A Context
The Second Amendment is a fundamental civil right, and the right of a parent to defend their children against a violent attacker sits at the absolute core of what that right protects. There is no waiting for police in a situation like this one. The carjacker was already in the driver’s seat. The vehicle was already being stolen. The family was already being moved.
Texas is a strong castle doctrine and stand your ground state. Texas Penal Code Section 9.32 recognizes the right to use deadly force to protect oneself or another person against unlawful deadly force, including in situations involving aggravated kidnapping or robbery. A carjacking with people still inside the vehicle squarely fits the framework the law contemplates.
For armed citizens, the takeaway is the timeline. The struggle lasted nearly a full minute. That is an eternity in a violent encounter, and it speaks to how committed the suspect was to taking the vehicle. It also illustrates why armed citizens should think carefully about how they are armed when out with their families, where they keep their firearm relative to where they are, and what their plan is if a sudden encounter requires them to act quickly outside the vehicle.
Garland Police Department’s quick assessment that this was self-defense, with no charges expected, also matters. It illustrates that lawful self-defense, properly executed, is recognized by responding law enforcement when the facts support it. The father’s decision to fight to protect his family was the right one.
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