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		<title>Man uses fake leg to take down robber</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2011/4/man-uses-fake-leg-to-take-down-robber.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Man uses fake leg to take down robber</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2011/4/man-uses-fake-leg-to-take-down-robber.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Sat, 02 Apr 2011 01:26:53 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Salem News<br /><br />Salem, MA<br /><br />April 1, 2011<br /><br />&#x27;I just reacted&#x27;<br /><br />Amputee, 55, describes how he took down alleged robber<br /><br />Ethan Forman<br /><br />Staff writer<br /><br />MIDDLETON Stephen Cornell didn&#x27;t think about his family or his job when he looked through the glass door at JC Grill Pizza on Wednesday night and saw a man pointing a black handgun at the owner inside.<br /><br />I just reacted, said Cornell, 55, a regular customer at the convenience store. I said, &#x27;OK, I&#x27;ll just wait,&#x27; and when he tries to come out of the store, I was going to jump him. He just came out so fast I tripped him, and he tripped me and I fell, and he fell.<br /><br />Cornell, who has a prosthetic leg and recently underwent shoulder surgery, said he actually intended to tackle the suspect, not trip him.<br /><br />He stumbled and fell, and God, when I was on the ground I was thinking, &#x27;Oh, my God, the next thing you know, he&#x27;s going to shoot me.&#x27;<br /><br />In the meantime, convenience store owner Edson Andrade had come around the counter and ran outside to help.<br /><br />The suspect, whom police identified as Eric F. Homen, 23, of 7 Raymond Circle, Peabody, got up and fled with the pistol, which turned out to be an air-powered pellet gun, police said.<br /><br />He was shooting, and he was firing the BB gun at (Andrade), Cornell said.<br /><br />Turning to shoot forced Homen to slow down, Cornell said, and Andrade, who was not hit by the pellets, tackled the suspect, pinning him in a headlock. Cornell stepped on Homen&#x27;s legs, and the men took his gun and subdued him, Andrade said.<br /><br />The suspect pleaded with his captors to let him go and gave back the money, $98, according to police.<br /><br />He had him in a chokehold all the way back to the store, Cornell said.<br /><br />When police arrived, they found Andrade and Cornell on top of Homen. They arrested the suspect and charged him with armed robbery while masked and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. Arraigned in Salem District Court yesterday, Homen pleaded not guilty and was held without bail.<br /><br />After his arrest, a nervous Homen agreed to talk to police, but in a videotaped interview, he claimed he could not recall what happened at the store, according to court papers. Homen said he was driving around Peabody, smoking marijuana, and recalled passing Richardson&#x27;s Ice Cream on Route 114. Then, he said, he blacked out and didn&#x27;t remember anything else.<br /><br />Homen&#x27;s parents were in court yesterday but declined to comment.<br /><br />&#x27;Everything they tell you not to do&#x27;<br /><br />Both Cornell and Andrade said they didn&#x27;t think the gun was real. Still, in hindsight, Cornell, a father of two teenagers and a 32-year employee at Eastman Gelatine, said tripping an armed suspect wasn&#x27;t the smartest move. After the incident, Cornell called his wife, Linda, and told her he helped stop a robbery.<br /><br />She said, &#x27;You did everything they tell you not to do, Cornell said. I don&#x27;t know. I reacted first and didn&#x27;t think.<br /><br />Andrade is a 36-year-old father of two who lives in Saugus. He was closing up around 8:50 p.m. when the suspect, with a shirt covering his face, walked in with the gun, the shop owner said.<br /><br />I looked down, and he has the gun in front of me, Andrade said. At first, he thought it was a joke. I thought it was not real, but you don&#x27;t want to take any chances, you know what I mean?<br /><br />The suspect demanded $300, he said, but Andrade said he didn&#x27;t have that much and told the man to just walk out. His sister, Rozane, was in the kitchen and didn&#x27;t know what was happening.<br /><br />I look outside, and I saw Steve, Andrade said. He threw the money at the suspect, and the man fled.<br /><br />Police Chief James DiGianvittorio agrees that perhaps Cornell and Andrade should have used more caution.<br /><br />On a case like this, where it&#x27;s a fleeing felon, you really don&#x27;t want people to corner a person like that because you don&#x27;t know what they are capable of doing, he said. You are lucky it worked out the way it did. ... If it was a real gun, we would be dealing with two deaths right now.<br /><br />Nonetheless, the chief plans to bring Cornell, Andrade, and responding officers Adam Maccini and Robert Currier to the next selectmen&#x27;s meeting so he can give the civilians citations of bravery and the officers letters of commendation.<br /><br />Cornell, who has lived in Middleton since 1990, is a regular at the convenience store at 323 N. Main St. (Route 114), which is a short walk from his Piedmont Street home.<br /><br />He grew up in Malden and lost his leg in 1968 at age 12 while trying to jump on a freight train, disobeying the warning of his mother after he&#x27;d attempted the stunt a few days before.<br /><br />I saw the train going by again, and I had a race with a bunch of friends, and I guess I didn&#x27;t run alongside of the train, I just ran straight at it.<br /><br />Cornell missed the train, and it ran over his leg.<br /><br />He remembers pulling his leg off the railroad tracks and backing away. Someone in a nearby lumberyard heard his screams.<br /><br />They just kept on asking my name, address, telephone number, parents; I was in a state of shock at that point.<br /><br />Cornell recalls Red Sox great Carl Yastrzemski visiting him in the hospital. Cornell mistook Yaz for Tony Conigliaro, another popular Sox player from the Impossible Dream season.<br /><br />At 12, I still had no fear and wouldn&#x27;t believe in what the doctors told me I couldn&#x27;t ride a bike, and I couldn&#x27;t play sports. I don&#x27;t accept &#x27;no&#x27; that easily.<br /><br />Cornell remains upbeat despite his setback as a kid. His prosthetic leg sports a Patriots sticker on the thigh, and he calls it Mr. Patriot for his love of the team.<br /><br />So many people have helped me out with my injury and leg, Cornell said, reflecting yesterday on his actions Wednesday night. It&#x27;s just nice to return the favor to someone else.<br /><br />The good people, they come through in situations like this, Andrade said. I told him, you save the day, I buy you dinner.<br /><br />Staff writer Julie Manganis contributed to this report.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2011/4/man-uses-fake-leg-to-take-down-robber.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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