He Had a Gun and Still Lost His Home Invasion Gunfight
A man died in his own bedroom last week with a gun in his hand.
We like to picture the home invasion playing out like a movie. The bad guy kicks the door, the homeowner produces a pistol, and the threat evaporates. Sometimes it works that way. This time it didn't.

Image generated via AI for educational purposes.
On Thursday, June 18, 2026, Pocono Mountain Regional Police were called to a home on Chelsea Circle in Coolbaugh Township, Pennsylvania. Officers found Layzon Breland, 26, on the floor of his upstairs bedroom with multiple gunshot wounds, including a fatal wound to the head.
Here is how police say it unfolded. Breland got into a fight in the front yard with another man. He retreated into the house. The other man, produced a handgun (maybe he went and got it?), and then forced his way into the house and chased him up the stairs firing on him. Breland armed himself in the bedroom, and the two then traded fire.
Breland hit his attacker at least once, leaving a blood trail from the bedroom out to the street. Twenty minutes later, a man with a 9mm wound to the arm was dropped at a Scranton hospital by a white Kia. Officers traced it and identified a suspect, now charged with criminal homicide and tampering with evidence. He has not been convicted, and a preliminary hearing is set for the end of the month.
So the homeowner was armed. He even wounded the man trying to kill him. And he still lost. Some of the likely reasons he lost are things you and I can control.
You can't draw a gun you had to go find
The reporting doesn't say where Breland's gun was, but the sequence tells the story. He spent the most dangerous moments of his life moving toward a firearm instead of using one.
That's the case for carrying on your body at home, and I know its really hard for many concealed carriers. A gun in the nightstand only helps if the fight waits for you to reach the nightstand. It rarely does. Figure a quality holster that fits your life. The point is to already be armed, not running to get armed.
This was not a burglar
Most home defense advice assumes a burglar who runs the second he sees a gun. The man who came through Breland's door wasn't there for a TV. He forced entry into the home to continue and escalate a fight that started in the yard.
When someone is there for you specifically, a drawn gun doesn't end it. They already accepted that risk before they walked in. You can't know in advance which threat you're facing, so plan for the one that doesn't scare off.
A gun is not a plan
This happened in a bedroom, not at the front door. “I own a gun” is not a home defense plan.
Know your cover before you need it. Drywall, your bed, or other furniture and objects can be effective mental barriers for the bad guy but they aren't guaranteed, and often not even likely to stop bullets. Know where the people you love go, what your defensible position is, and what you're telling 911 while it happens. None of that gets invented mid-gunfight.
The honest takeaway
A different choice might not have saved Breland. We weren't there, and the case is still in the courts. But the lessons are clean even when the outcome wasn't.
- Carry on your body, even at home.
- Train for the attacker who doesn't flee.
- Know your cover. Stage it in advance.
- Have a plan for your family and the phone, not just the trigger.
Owning a firearm is the starting line, not the finish. If you want to build the skills and plan a night like this demands, our Complete Home Defense Tactics course walks you through defending your home the way it really works.