
Meet Stephon Henderson. Mr Henderson, 59, allegedly shot and killed Talina Henderson, 47, his wife, at a residence in the 2800 block of Bay Colony Lane. Mrs Henderson was shot “multiple times,” which tells us that this was no accident. This was Lexington’s record-breaking 41st murder of the year; the previous record of 37 was set in 2021.
According to the Lexington Herald-Leader and Fayette County Detention Center records, Mr Henderson was charged with murder (domestic violence), violation of an emergency protection order/domestic violence order, and possession of a handgun by a previously convicted felon.
Now, you would think that any person with an IQ above room temperature who was the subject of a domestic violence protection order would be smart enough to not have a handgun. You would think that any such person who is a previously convicted felon would be smart enough to realize that possession of a handgun, a violation of KRS §527.020 (2)(a), is a Class C felony, punishable by a minimum of five and maximum of ten years in the state penitentiary under KRS §532.060, even if he never uses it, and the existence of a protection order could easily result in the police searching his home.
Bay Colony Lane, near Masterson Station Park in Lexington is hardly a bad area. It’s something of a cookie-cutter development, of decent single-family homes with actual front and back yards. While Zillow shows no homes currently for sale on Bay Colony Lane itself, 2657 Wigginton Point, a couple of streets away in the same development, is a three bedroom, three bath, 2,056 ft², built in 2020, very similar home listed for $327,900. The whole area looks neat and clean; it’s not run-down at all. There is a lot of new development in that area off of Leestown Road. Simply put, there was no particular self-defense need for Mr Henderson to be packing.
This tells me of just how ridiculous it is for the left to tell us we need more gun control laws. Mr Henderson — assuming that he is guilty of the charges — was obviously able to obtain a handgun, despite being legally barred from buying one. More, he knew that it was illegal for him to own one, yet he chose to do so anyway. Then, after doing something — the newspaper does not tell us what it was — to cause his wife to seek an emergency protection order, he still kept the gun, even knowing that the police could come at any time and search his residence for a weapon, and knowing that simple possession of the weapon was enough to send him back to the big house for five to ten years. All of those reasons not to have a firearm, and he chose to have one anyway.
He was subject to a restraining order, but he was near his wife anyway. I guess that piece of paper didn’t do very much to defend her.
Mr Henderson is 59 years old, and the possible sentences for murder in the Bluegrass State include death, life in prison without the possibility of parole, 25 years to life, or a 20-to-50-year sentence. If convicted of murder, there is no way Mr Henderson would be out of jail until he’s 79 years old, and possibly not until he’s stone-cold graveyard dead. He threw the rest of his miserable life away.
And for what? Sometimes I fantasize about what other people can be thinking. As he sits in his cell, is he thinking, “Damn, I sure showed her!“, or is it more probable that he’s thinking, “Boy, did I f(ornicate) up this time”? I’d bet one thing though; I’d bet he isn’t thinking, “Hey, I sure got around those gun control laws, didn’t I?”
__________________________________
Follow me on Twitter! Check out my website, The First Street Journal, for stories not on American Free News network.
_________________________________
Follow AFNN:
- Facebook: American Free News Network on Facebook
- Telegram: American Free News Network: Join Channel..
- Twitter: @AFNNUSA
- GETTR: @AFNN_USA
- Truth Social: https://truthsocial.com/@AFNN_USA
- Parler: https://parler.com/AFNNUSA
The case does tend to point to the circumstance that while a felony conviction might be a barrier to lawfully purchasing a firearm, it was not a barrier to residing in a home worth $327,000, which “social justice advocates” claim is the reason we should stop charging anyone with a felony.
The article does not state that Mr Henderson resided at the home where the homicide occurred, but he was arrested at 2681 Bay Colony Lane, a couple of blocks away from the 2800 block, where the murder is said to have occurred.
With an emergency protection order, it is very possible that Mr and Mrs Henderson bought the home together, and he was kicked out following a domestic abuse incident. I just don’t know. I do know that he must be as dumb as a box of rocks.