The Brief:
A peaceful family gathering in Leesburg, Georgia, turned violent when an armed individual wearing body armor opened fire on a group of children and elderly relatives. The attacker initially targeted the family with racial slurs before returning with a rifle to initiate an active shooting.
A Marine veteran attending the reunion stopped the assault by returning fire with a personal handgun, neutralizing the suspect. Deputies arrested the gunman, who now faces aggravated assault charges. Authorities are investigating the incident as a potential hate crime while considering additional felony counts for the case.
LEESBURG, GA — A Sunday evening celebration in Southwest Georgia became a scene of absolute terror, highlighting the critical role of a trained armed citizen when a worst-case scenario materializes. Deputies from the Lee County Sheriff’s Office converged on the 100 and 200 blocks of Autumn Leaf Drive following multiple frantic 911 calls reporting a mass shooting in progress.
The incident targeted a Black family who had gathered from across the region for a weekend family reunion. According to victims and witnesses, the peaceful gathering was disrupted around 9:00 p.m. when a vehicle cruised past the residence. Leaning precariously out of the window, a passenger later identified as Jeffrey Tyler Kinzer began screaming a barrage of racial slurs at the group, which included roughly 20 children and multiple elderly relatives.
The Armored Return
While the family immediately contacted local law enforcement to report the targeted harassment, the legal system’s timeline could not match the speed of the threat. Barely five minutes later, the vehicle lurked back onto Autumn Leaf Drive.
This time, Kinzer exited the vehicle fully escalated: he had donned a tactical ballistic vest (body armor) and was wielding an AR-15 rifle.

As the crowd spotted the long gun from a distance, absolute panic erupted. Elderly grandmothers and toddlers threw themselves onto the asphalt, seeking whatever meager cover they could find beneath parked vehicles. Kinzer opened fire into the yard, sending high-velocity rounds tearing through the residential sector.
“He Found Out He Wasn’t the Only One with Training”
Stepping directly into the line of fire was family member Ramell Green. Recognizing that the children behind him would be massacred if the rifleman advanced checked, the Marine veteran drew his personal carry weapon, stepped out into the center of the street, and aggressively moved toward the threat while unleashing a string of accurate defensive shots.
“People started taking positions because they saw he had a gun,” Green stated in an interview with WALB. “And I was in the middle of the street. And I grabbed my gun and started returning fire and moving with him… He came and caused that to happen. And he found out that he’s not the only one that has training.”
Green’s defensive fire hit its mark. Despite the suspect’s protective body armor, the veteran’s rounds successfully degraded Kinzer’s mobility and struck him, instantly halting the active shooting spree.
Hospitalized, Jailed, and Awaiting Justice
Arriving deputies secured Kinzer’s rifle and armor, taking him into custody directly on the pavement. The hate-fueled gunman was transported under armed guard to a regional trauma center. After being medically cleared for his gunshot wounds, Kinzer was processed into the Lee County Jail on initial counts of aggravated assault.
The victimized family is publicly demanding that the District Attorney upgrade the charges to attempted mass murder and formal hate crime enhancements under Georgia law. The Lee County Sheriff’s Office has confirmed that the preliminary charges are merely a baseline holding mechanism and additional, severe felony counts are actively expected as the forensic investigation matures.
Safety Tip: This terrifying encounter provides an advanced tactical lesson on engaging an active shooter who is utilizing “Force Multipliers” like body armor and an intermediate-caliber rifle. When an attacker wears soft armor or plate carriers, standard center-mass shots to the chest may fail to instantly stop their forward momentum. If you are forced to engage an armored threat with a defensive handgun, your training must account for alternative targeting zones. In tactical disciplines, this is handled via the “Failure to Stop” or “Mozambique” drill: if initial rounds to the high-chest do not drop the threat, your point of aim must immediately transition to the pelvic bowl (which breaks structural mobility and drops the attacker to the ground) or the central nervous system zone of the head. Marine veteran Ramell Green saved dozens of lives tonight because he refused to remain a static target—he used movement, suppressed the threat with return fire, and applied the ultimate counter-pressure required to break a predator’s focus.
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