Lou Henson was a very old and angry man. He recently turned 90 and Christmas was right around the corner. His entire life he save his money to buy a transferable weapon. Something Santa Claus failed to leave under the tree on two occasions. It was the one thing he would do if if had the balls to do it. But the one idea in the that would hold him back was, what if he lives for ever, and prison is not the place where you want to spend an eternity in a wheelchair with 40% of your head is missing.
He felt that the people failed him. Not once, but twice. The first time when the police shoved him into a modified police car of such a shocking nature that a reasonable man or woman would be horrified. They removed the squad car number from the police report and altered the site when the original incident took place. Some people look at the intersection now and ask why would the police be here when 1 part of the intersection was blocked by a parkway built where the crosswalk would be. This put them at a great disadvantge.
The second time was a larger and more important Toxic tort where an entire neighborhood was contaminated by waste product from an old chemical power plant. There was once a fence around the area, but it was torn down shortly after he was released from jail. A lawyer came by and had him sign some papers. He was giving up his rights in exchange for his mother to be allowoed to settle out of court. At least that's how it was explained to him. Why a child needs to sign a document so his mother can settle out of court is beyond me.
After his mother died, he found his answer, the people had failed. It did not satisfy his idea of a safty net in a 200 million dollar lawsuit. He started shooting near Sheets Boutique and worked his way over towards the bank where he unloaded another belt. Many of the rounds were knee high and richets throughout the building tear holes in anything that was in the way. He eventually ran out of bullets and collapsed onto the floor from one of his own rounds. It was a shoot aimed at a knee cap the had spun out of control in return fire.