A former security guard who shot a
man to death in 2003 for driving the wrong direction on a one-way
street was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and armed criminal
action. A Jackson County jury on Thursday recommended minimum sentences
of five years and three years, respectively, for Vincent Flores, 34, of
Kansas City, who killed Gerald Meszaros, 58, on Aug. 12, 2003, in the
northeast part of the city where the two men lived. A judge will decide
later whether to impose the sentences consecutively or concurrently.
Flores was on his way to work when he confronted Meszaros, who was
taking a routine shortcut to his home. Testimony showed that Meszaros
refused to get out of the car and repeatedly bumped the vehicle into
Flores. Defense attorneys tried to convince the jury that Flores was
afraid for his life because he was being bumped by the car and he shot
Meszaros through the windshield in self-defense. Flores yelled "stop,
stop, stop" and fired, defense attorney Burton Haigh told jurors. "How
long was he supposed to wait? Until he was being dragged down that hill
on his back?" Haigh said. The attorney also noted that Meszaros' blood
alcohol content was more than twice the legal driving limit, which he
said supported Flores' claims that Meszaros was hostile and irrational.
But prosecutors said Flores, who had been a security guard for about a
month, was mad because Meszaros wouldn't get out of the car when he was
told to do so. "You know what? He doesn't have to" take orders from
someone who is not a police officer, assistant prosecutor Mark Jones
said. "The defendant shot Gerald Meszaros on a public street over a
parking ticket," Jones said. "He did it when the car was in park." The
state was trying to convict Flores of second-degree murder, but the
jury decided voluntary manslaughter was more appropriate. [more]