Witnesses, video describe chaotic gun scene

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Ethan Edwards turns to ask a question of Judge Harry Freitas Thursday in Hilo District Court. (JOHN BURNETT/Tribune-Herald)
John William "Bill" Hubbard, left, appears June 4 in Hilo District Court with Deputy Public Defender Michael Ebesugawa. (JOHN BURNETT/Tribune-Herald)
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HILO — A 36-year-old Pahoa man who faced down the barrel of a handgun that fired at least two gunshots in lava-ravaged Leilani Estates on May 29 testified he was “afraid for his life” during the incident.

Ethan Edwards told Hilo District Judge Harry Freitas he saw 61-year-old John William “Bill” Hubbard pull a silver revolver out of his pocket, “point it at my head … raise it into the air and fire it.”

Edwards’ testimony came Thursday the second day of a preliminary hearing to determine if there is probable cause to try Hubbard for first-degree robbery, reckless endangering, use of a firearm in the commission of a separate felony, illegally carrying a handgun, having no permit to acquire a firearm and no firearm registration, two counts of reckless endangering and five counts of first-degree terroristic threatening.

Edwards said Hubbard, the man police say was the shooter in a Facebook video that went viral, drove quickly on Kahukai Street toward the intersection of Makamae Street in his white pickup truck, got out and told everyone in the vicinity to identify themselves and to leave. He said Hubbard struck him twice before pointing the revolver and that he blocked both strikes with his arms.

“I couldn’t actually believe what was happening,” Edwards said. “I think I said, ‘Are you f——-g kidding me?’”

Edwards, whose Leilani Estates home fell victim to lava prior to the incident, described Hubbard as “really angry” and “super aggressive.” He acknowledged he reacted aggressively to Hubbard’s alleged aggression.

“I started approaching him and said, ‘You’re gonna get f——-g arrested for that,’” Edwards said. “… I reiterated, ‘I live here. I have a right to be here.’”

Edwards testified he contemplated revenge as he got into his car to leave.

“I looked for my keys because I was going to run him over, but I couldn’t find them,” he said.

Edwards was part of a group of five people in two cars and his friend, Preston Cook, was a passenger in his car. Lauren Kaech drove the other vehicle, with her cousin, Aurorah Davis, and Briana Spangler, Edwards’ partner, as passengers.

A stranger, Patricia Jones, was also present, and shot video of the altercation.

Nobody was physically injured in the incident.

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Hubbard’s felony record, according to documents, includes a 1976 drug trafficking conviction in Kentucky and a 1986 Oregon conviction for being a felon in possession of a concealable weapon.

In Hawaii, he’s been convicted in 2009 with resisting arrest, a misdemeanor, and harassment, a petty misdemeanor. A misdemeanor firearms charge was dropped in that case. He also has a 2013 conviction for harassment. A court has ordered him to undergo anger management counseling. He’s also had numerous run-ins with neighbors, some allegedly documented on YouTube. In addition, Hubbard has been the subject of several temporary restraining order petitions and has himself filed for TROs against others. He and a neighbor, Andy Williamson, were granted a mutual TRO in 2008.

Hubbard, listed in court documents as 6-foot-8 and 235 pounds, is a retired commercial diver who repaired underwater pipelines. He told the late Tribune-Herald columnist Wayne Joseph in 2009 he worked in waters as deep as 800 feet in the North Sea, Central America, Mexico and California.

The Missouri-born Hubbard, who’s lived in Hawaii since 1996, played football at the University of Kentucky.

Email John Burnett at jburnett@hawaiitribune-herald.com.