Key Takeaways
- A food delivery driver fatally shot an armed carjacker in Nashville after the suspect fired at him.
- The driver was approached while returning to his car and refused to hand over his keys, leading to the confrontation.
- The driver, armed legally, returned fire and hit the suspect, who died at the scene.
- The driver is recovering in the hospital, and police have not filed any charges as they identify the suspect.
- The incident highlights the risks delivery workers face and the importance of the Second Amendment for self-defense.
Estimated reading time: 3 minutes
NASHVILLE, TN — A food delivery driver shot and killed an armed carjacker after the suspect opened fire on him near Nashville’s Melrose neighborhood, according to Metro Nashville police.
The driver was walking back to his car from a nearby restaurant along 8th Avenue South when a man with a gun approached and demanded the keys to his Dodge Charger. When the driver refused to hand them over, police say the suspect fired, grazing the driver’s leg.
The driver, who was lawfully armed, returned fire. His shots struck the suspect, who was pronounced dead at the scene.
The food delivery driver was transported to a hospital, where he is recovering. Police have not announced any charges in the incident.
Investigators say the suspect was carrying no identification, and detectives are working to identify him through fingerprints.
More from USA Carry:
Drivers who spend long hours on the road, including delivery and ride-share workers, face an elevated risk of being targeted in carjackings and robberies. Many now lawfully carry firearms for personal protection. The incident in Nashville reflects a broader pattern of armed citizens who train and prepare for the possibility that they may one day be forced to defend their lives.
The Second Amendment exists precisely so that ordinary people can meet a deadly threat with the means to survive it. When a violent attacker fires first, the lawful use of force in self-defense is not just a constitutional protection. It is often the only thing standing between a working person and a body bag. Nashville’s food delivery driver did exactly what the law and common sense allow: he stopped a deadly threat against his own life and lived to walk out of the hospital.
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