A licensed Queens homeowner turned the tables on a trio of burglars by drawing his concealed Sig Sauer, exposing how New York’s evolving gun-permit laws meet surging car-theft rings in real time.
Window Crash at 2:40 a.m.
Moshe Borukh, 35, was still half-awake after getting a drink of water when the sound of shattering glass cut through his Jamaica Estates home. Security footage shows a lone intruder climbing through a ground-floor window, flashlight on, hunting for the key fob to Borukh’s Bentley while two accomplices kept watch outside.
“I Have a Gun. Don’t Move.”
Borukh, licensed to carry a Sig Sauer P365, descended the staircase and locked eyes with the prowler. He raised the pistol and issued a single command. The burglar dove back through the broken window, sprinted past his partners and vanished into the darkness. No shots were fired; the mere presence of an armed resident ended the attempted heist in seconds.
Why It Matters: Car Theft Meets Concealed-Carry Uptick
- Surging grand-larceny-auto: NYPD data show a 15% jump in car thefts citywide in 2025, with luxury brands near highways prime targets.
- Permit surge: After the 2022 Bruen Supreme Court ruling, New York issued roughly 60,000 new pistol permits in two years, a 250% spike over pre-pandemic levels.
- Castle doctrine tension: State law allows deadly force to stop burglary, but prosecutors still scrutinize every firearm display, making public cases like Borukh’s flashpoints.
“Catch-and-Release” Complaint
Responding deputies told Borukh that two other vehicles had been stolen within a six-block radius overnight and suggested the crew was working a nightly “quota.” The homeowner’s frustration mirrors a broader worry: even when thieves are arrested, many are back on the street under bail-reform guidelines that treat auto theft as a non-violent offense.
Highway Getaway Geography
Jamaica Estates sits minutes from the Grand Central Parkway and Interstate 678, giving thieves a straight shot out of the city. Investigators believe crews scout blocks with multiple luxury cars, fast exits and minimal late-night patrol presence.
Family Aftermath
Borukh’s wife remains anxious, and while their youngest child, 4, was spared the details, the older kids “know exactly what happened.” Security cameras now record every exterior angle, and the family keeps the porch lights on overnight—small adjustments in a neighborhood where residents once left doors unlocked.
Policy Ripples
Gun-rights advocates cite Borukh’s case as proof that trained, licensed owners can deter crime without firing a shot. Critics counter that more firearms in homes raise the odds of accidental shootings. Meanwhile, Albany lawmakers are weighing a bill to classify certain repeat auto thefts as violent felonies, a shift that could keep chronic offenders behind bars longer.
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