where the victim had to pull
out a knife to defend himself. Apparently, the possible suspect
has already left the scene. Hello, what's going on? - So I live [inaudible]. - OK. - And three years ago, there
was some dude snooping along my fence.
- OK. - So I was walking
down the street here, and I saw the guy that's all in
black snooping along the fence. And so I stood there on the
street, and I watched him. Then this car right
here drove past. - OK. - I turned around and,
like, a dude got out. I waved. I said, hey. Dude, the guy came and
started assaulting me. Like-- - OK, what do you mean? - Like, OK, he struck
me once in the face. And he struck me in the throat. He said, get off my property. So I backed up, and I
went onto the street. - OK. - He followed me
onto the street. He struck me in the face, and
he struck me in the throat. And all I did was move away. And when he came after
me again and again, I pulled out my pocket knife. And I started
screaming for help, like, at the top
of my lungs, help. - OK, do you need
medical or anything? I don't see any marks or any. - No. I don't-- like, my jaw
hurts and my throat hurts. - OK. - But I'd like to press charges. - Hello. - Hello. - What's going on between
you and that guy over there? - OK. - OK. - So I got out the car,
and I walked up to him. And I was like, what are
you doing on my property? He said, oh, I was
watching your-- that guy back there snooping
through the buildings, talking about my dad. - OK. - And I said, he
owns this property. Can you step off?
'Cause he-- he was-- we were probably,
like, right here. I asked him to step off,
and he stepped towards me. - OK. - I stepped back. I said, hey, you need
to leave the property. He stepped towards me
again, and I hit him. - The next time, I'm just
going to shoot the bastard. - That's probably a bad idea. - Why wouldn't you just call
us and have us deal with it? - OK. But you could also just
have us be the peacekeepers. - OK, all righty. - OK. - OK, do you think someone can
see that sign from the road? - I don't care if they
can see it or not. Can you see it? - From here, not
really, kind of. He wants to press
charges for battery. - OK? So-- - OK, hold on. So I'm talking to him right now. I'll talk to you
in a second, OK? You keep interrupting
while I'm trying to talk. Does that make sense? - Yeah.
Me, too. I gotcha. OK? - I-- I gotcha. So here's the--
here's the deal, OK? So it's a battery not
committed in my presence, OK? So what happens is it goes to
the district attorney's office. You're both solicited
as victims and suspects. And it's up to the
district attorney what happens from there. So apparently, they're very
protective over their property. But we are going to trespass
them from the property and collect his statement. Do you know the
old man over there? - No. Dude, like, I walk
past their house all the time to the point
where their dog Sadie know me. - OK. - My concern is-- is
this is my neighbor. - I gotcha. - And I was just
assaulted by people that I don't
recognize at a house that they don't belong at. - OK. - Right? I can hardly talk. I'm dizzy. I think that I need a paramedic. I need to go to the
hospital or something, because this is
[bleep],, you know? I'm walking down my
street, I'm assault. I can hardly [bleep] speak. - OK. Well, I asked you earlier if you
wanted medics, and you said no. - Well, I'm saying I do,
because it was, like, 15 seconds after I just got struck. - So he lives there,
and he's blind. - That would explain
it. 'Cause, like-- - Yes.
- I've had this guy-- - That would
definitely explain it. - Same thing, like-- - So he was wandering
the property-- - --not the same person. - --using that line
on the ground-- - And so I'm wondering
what this guy is doing. - --to be able to walk around. - Like, I'm not spooking. I'm looking out for
my neighbor, man. - No, I gotcha. So that-- just I'm just
letting you know that that's - You know what? Just-- just forget
the paramedic, dude. - Are you sure? - Yeah. Like, if the guy is blind
and his young son is thinking I'm spooking his property,
let's be the bigger man and say [bleep] it. Like, I did not know
that the guy was blind. - OK. - Like, straight up, like, I'm
looking out for my neighbor. - No, I-- I 100% get it. But just so you
know, he is blind. His son came and was like, hey,
what's this guy doing here-- - Staring at my blind father?
- Yeah. So-- - And then he probably can't
hear anything I'm saying, because the wind is blowing. - 'Cause it's windy. He's declining charges at
this time it sounds like. But either way,
what's going to happen is it's going to go to the
district attorney's office. And it's up to them if
charges will be filed. He was officially trespassed
from that property. So if he does go
back on the property, he could be subject to
a misdemeanor arrest.