Forget about the Twinkie defense–there’s a new junk food defense in town. Its name? The Taco Bell burrito.

When a San Antonio man ordered seven Beefy Crunch Burritos, he expected them to cost 99 cents apiece. But when he realized the Taco Bell burrito price had been raised to a whopping $1.49, all hell broke loose.

He shot the place up.

After the shock of an extra $3.50 wore off, the Taco Bell Burrito Bandit entered the establishment to speak to the manager, details the San Antonio Express-News. Annoyed by the explanation, he raised his air gun and shot.

It gets better. Employees report seeing the Burrito Bandit pulling both an assault rifle and a handgun from the roof of his car. He shot those weapons at recently-arrived police, and then fled on foot to his hotel room.

Turns out all of his weapons were air-powered and not actual firearms, reports the San Antonio Express-News.

At first, our intrepid Burrito Bandit was to be charged with attempted murder, but the paper reports that charges have been downgraded to aggravated assault against a public servant.

You may be asking yourself how he can be charged with aggravated assault when the guns were fake. Aggravated assault is merely a threat or attempt to harm a person with attached special circumstances. In this case, it is likely with a deadly weapon. Even though the guns were not firearms, if used correctly, air guns can cause life-threatening injury.

Before you get any ideas, the likelihood of the Taco Bell burrito defense working its magic is nil. $3.50 is simply not an excuse to attack fast food employees. It is, however, a reason to go eat something real.

Related Resources:

  • Taco Bell Customer Goes on Violent Burrito Rage (Fox News)
  • Aggravated Assault (FindLaw)
  • BB Guns (FindLaw)
  • Woman Gets $2,000 Cash from Taco Bell Drive Through (FindLaw’s Legally Weird)
  • Taco Bell Lawsuit: ‘Meat Filling’ in Tacos is not Actual Meat (FindLaw’s Common Law)

You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help

Civil Rights

Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court

Criminal

Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records

Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules