A Hopkins County homeowner fatally shot a violent intruder on Tuesday morning, May 19, 2026, after the suspect smashed through a glass front door and attempted to breach the residence. The entire encounter was captured on a Ring doorbell camera, which shows the suspect yelling and striking the glass before the resident fired a single defensive shot.
HOPKINS COUNTY, KY — A violent, early-morning home invasion in Western Kentucky was cut short Tuesday when a homeowner used a firearm to protect their residence. According to the Hopkins County Sheriff’s Office, deputies were dispatched to a home following reports of a forced entry and gunfire.
The critical moments of the encounter were captured in high definition by a Ring doorbell camera mounted next to the front door. The footage reportedly shows a male suspect, later identified by authorities as Buck Clary, acting aggressively on the front porch. Clary was seen yelling incoherently and repeatedly striking the glass panes of the home’s front door.
The Breach and the Defensive Shot
The situation quickly escalated from vandalism to an imminent physical threat. The sheriff’s office stated that Clary managed to shatter a portion of the glass door. Immediately after breaking the window, Clary reached his arm inside the structure—presumably attempting to unlock the door from the inside to gain full entry.
Fearing an immediate breach, the homeowner, who was armed inside the foyer, fired a single shot directly through the damaged door. The round struck Clary in the upper torso, instantly halting the home invasion.
Hopkins County EMS personnel rushed to the scene and transported Clary to a regional hospital, where he was later pronounced deceased from his injuries.
Ongoing Investigation and the Law
The Hopkins County Sheriff’s Office remains on the scene and is actively reviewing the digital video evidence. Because the homeowner was facing a violent, forced entry into an occupied dwelling, the preliminary assessment points to a clear case of justified self-defense under Kentucky law.
Safety Tip: This incident perfectly illustrates the tactical reality of a “Breach Point.” A glass door or a large sidelight window near a door handle is one of the most common vulnerabilities exploited by home invaders. In Kentucky, under the state’s robust Castle Doctrine (KRS 503.055), a homeowner has a legal presumption of a reasonable fear of imminent death or great bodily injury if someone is unlawfully and forcefully entering an occupied home. Tactically, firing through a door can be dangerous due to target identification issues, but because the resident had visual verification via the glass pane and the intruder was actively reaching inside, the threat was fully identified. For home defense, consider reinforcing front door glass with heavy-duty security film, which prevents the glass from instantly shattering and buys you precious extra seconds to retreat to a secure, armed position.
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