The Brief:
In May 2026, a teenager fatally shot his father, Andrey Nears, during a domestic dispute at a Tulsa apartment complex. The incident occurred after Nears physically assaulted the teenager and his mother. The minor retrieved a handgun and fired a single defensive shot to stop the ongoing attack.
Tulsa police released the teenager following questioning, citing Oklahoma laws regarding the defense of others. The District Attorney is currently reviewing the case as a justified homicide while forensic investigations continue. A final legal determination will be made once the investigation into the domestic incident is complete.
TULSA, OK — An afternoon disturbance inside a residential community turned lethal when a teenager stepped in to shield his mother from a violent physical attack. At approximately 2:00 p.m. on Sunday, May 31, 2026, Tulsa police emergency dispatchers received a frantic 911 call from a woman reporting that a shooting had occurred inside a unit at the Avondale Apartments, located near the intersection of 67th Street and Utica Avenue.
Uniformed officers flooded the scene and discovered 49-year-old Andrey Nears inside the residence suffering from a catastrophic, point-blank gunshot wound to the head. Nears was pronounced deceased at the scene by arriving emergency medical personnel.
A Shield Against Domestic Violence
According to statements provided to detectives by the mother, the incident began as a highly volatile domestic dispute. Nears reportedly turned physically aggressive, launching a violent attack against his 16-year-old son before pivoting and savagely assaulting his wife.
Fearing for his mother’s life and facing imminent physical harm himself, the teenager broke away from the altercation and located a handgun that was kept stored within the apartment. He returned to the room and fired a single defensive shot, striking Nears in the skull and instantly terminating the assault.
The Legal Framework: Defense of Another
Homicide detectives transported the 16-year-old to police headquarters for extensive questioning. Following the interview, and in coordination with the Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office, the minor was released back to his mother without any immediate criminal charges or detention.
Under Oklahoma state statutes, a citizen is legally permitted to utilize deadly force not only to protect their own life, but also in the defense of another individual who is facing an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm. Because the evidence on scene strongly supports the mother’s account of a severe, continuous domestic beating, prosecutors are handling the incident as an apparent act of justified defense, though a final determination will be made once the forensic investigation is entirely compiled.
Safety Tip: This harrowing incident brings to light a critical concept within the 2A community: “Redundant Accessibility” during an internal security breakdown. When a violent threat materializes from inside the home due to domestic battery, standard home defense concepts (like staging a gun purely near the front door) are turned upside down. The teenager survived and preserved his mother’s life because he was able to successfully disengage from a physical struggle, traverse the apartment, and gain immediate access to a defensive tool. For families, staging emergency tools in secure, rapid-access lockboxes across central living zones ensures that if one area of the home is cut off or compromised by an aggressor, a secondary defensive asset remains within reach. Furthermore, if you are ever forced to fire a weapon to stop an domestic assault, secure the tool immediately once the threat is down, clear the area, and remain on the line with 911 until uniformed first responders are on the threshold.
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