Humboldt, AZ – A homeowner in Humboldt, Arizona, was forced to defend his family Saturday evening when a man he had been drinking with earlier returned to the house, wielding a large knife and threatening to kill everyone inside.
According to the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office, the homeowner and the suspect, 32-year-old Dustin Hester, were drinking together when an argument broke out. Hester left the property but later came back armed with a knife, shouting threats. The homeowner immediately locked his doors, with his family still inside, as Hester began banging on windows and doors.
Despite being warned repeatedly to leave, Hester continued his aggressive behavior. When he advanced toward the armed homeowner, the homeowner shot him in the leg. Hester ignored the wound and kept coming, prompting the homeowner to fire again, ultimately disabling the threat.
Sheriff’s deputies arrived to find one man surrendering and Hester suffering from lower-body gunshot wounds. Deputies applied a tourniquet and had him airlifted to a Phoenix hospital, where he is expected to recover. Hester has been charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, criminal trespass, disorderly conduct with a deadly weapon, and threatening or intimidating a family.
Are You Paying Attention
This case highlights exactly why the right to keep and bear arms is essential for everyday Americans. When seconds mattered, the police were still minutes away. A homeowner faced with a violent, armed intruder threatening his family didn’t have time to call 911 and hope for the best—he had to act.
The homeowner used his firearm responsibly: he tried to de-escalate, gave repeated warnings, and only opened fire when the threat became imminent. It’s a textbook example of defensive gun use—something anti-gun activists often ignore when pushing for stricter laws that would leave good people defenseless.
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Bottom Line
It was a potentially deadly attack on a family in their own home—stopped by a citizen exercising his constitutional rights. In a world where threats don’t wait for help to arrive, being armed and prepared can make all the difference.
Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office thanked Prescott Valley Police for their assistance.
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“When seconds mattered, the police were still minutes away.”
In Humboldt? Consult your sundial.
Left unexplained in this account is the question of how the face-to-face encounter happened. If “everybody was in the house” and the drunk attacker was outside banging on doors etc., how did the homeowner come face-to-face in such a way as to necessitate shooting the “attacker”? Did the guy break in? Did the homeowner go outside to meet him (e.g., engage the attacker)? Inquiring minds want to know.
HE may not have had time to call 911, but his family was locked in the house! None of them had time to call 911? That comment was stupid, pure speculation. That’s why you have a family plan, “These are the steps we need to take if something happens…”, conversation.
Just the other day, I was telling the dog…
There’s a big difference between knife attack and guys that stop by to celebrate diversity with you.
I read the article just to see if it had a happy ending. I see now that it didn’t because the perp lived.