It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
speculativeoptimist
reply to post by cosmicexplorer
Hey cos, since you were an officer and on a swat team, what is the policy for this situation? My impression, outdated as it may be, was that an officer should not take a shot in this situation with someone holding a hostage at gunpoint. What do they teach you about this scenario? Maybe I am the one that has watched too many movies.
reply to post by cosmicexplorer
That is not enough training for a hostage situation.
deadcalm
reply to post by cosmicexplorer
That is not enough training for a hostage situation.
I totally agree with this assesment. Which is exactly why I've said that he should have backed off and waited for trained professionals to deal with it.
His recklessness got that girl killed. He should have been smart enough to know that he was way out of his league.
Thats why they have SWAT in the first place. Not for serving petty drug offense warrants as they so often do.
So wouldn`t you say that...given what we know...that this officer was negligent and reckless?
Oh Wrabbit...you have no idea how much I'd like to believe that...but I've met way too many cowboy cops with zero remorse for anything that literally itch to go out there and look like a hero dispatching bad guys.
In this case a 21 year old girl, with her entire life ahead of her paid for it with her life.
Most cops don't have the spare money, time or interest to actually shoot the volume to be 'that' good, IMO.
May I ask you something....just to play devils advocate....what would you have done if you arrived on scene..you see a hostage....and the bad guy points the gun at you...what do you? just curious... -
I shoot this well. I don't horse around on the range, but I have a tendency to draw a crowd. I wonder who will understand my point.
I expect, although it is rare to see these days, that every officer of the law (here or in the US) who is armed, should be able to shoot with the same high accuracy at five yards, or fifty, or not be allowed a weapon.
TrueBrit
reply to post by cosmicexplorer
No. I have no firearm training. I have lived on the street, had to take knives and what turned out to be pellet guns (although I had no way of knowing at midnight, in an alley, exactly what I was dealing with) away from people, and had to do so when other street dwellers were at risk. I have walked up on situations where a weapon was against the head of someone I knew, and had to act to stop them getting hurt.
But this is not about me, this is about responsibility. IF I intended to become an armed officer of the law, or let's say that sense finally prevailed and allowed me the right as a British citizen, to carry a sword in public, for my own defence and the defence of my community, you can bet that I would be in training with that weapon, for at least an hour a day, every day. I prefer blades to bullets because they have a lower collateral damage risk associated with them, but even if I was forced to carry a gun instead, I would train with it constantly, because I understand the responsibility attached to it.
There are two main responsibilities that come to mind. First, is to use that weapon as effectively as possible, to ensure that the outcome of situations which require its use are as good as possible. Second, is to ensure that by use of that weapon, nothing becomes WORSE than it ought to be. Hell, I am learning to drive right now, and until I can stop on a penny piece with less than a seconds warning, I will not be even taking my driving test, let alone consider myself ready to take what is essentially a ton and a half of metal and plastic for a spin without supervision.
If I, with my limited experience of weapon use, can identify improvements that need making in terms of the responsibility shown by officers of the law, employed by the state to perform armed duty, then something has gone seriously awry! I expect, although it is rare to see these days, that every officer of the law (here or in the US) who is armed, should be able to shoot with the same high accuracy at five yards, or fifty, or not be allowed a weapon. I expect minimum standards of aptitude to be enforced, preventing any officer who fails to show total diligence and personal responsibility for his or her maintaining that standard, from being on active duty, until such time as they achieve mastery of their equipment, AND that achieving that standard for the good of their communities, should be their only focus. Not family, not friends, not poker night on Tuesdays, and not a pay check.
In short, this is work which should only be done by people who not only love their communities, but define themselves by the quality of the protection they offer the societies in which they live, by people who have a selfless determination to become whatever they need to be in order to do that work to a minimum standard which would seem like perfection, when held up against performance of the sort demonstrated by the incident we are discussing. Anything less in terms of dedication from the people who do this work, will see them accidentally murder the people they are supposed to protect, and that is not acceptable.
TrueBrit
reply to post by cosmicexplorer
Indeed, finding the compromise between the two points of view is the method by which a great many things are achieved. I think the issue that I have with the way this worked out, is that unlike a one in one hundred sniper error, in the example you gave, this was a situation where the policeman unloaded an awful lot of bullets, at a target which was very close to a hostage, and there is no way that I would have expected any other result from that, than the unfortunate one which came about.
I have never fired a weapon, but I know that when one fires a round, the recoil effect can cause the muzzle of the weapon to lift, or in some other way travel off point for a split second. This means that consecutive shots are taken only after the weapon has been forced back to centre by careful control on the part of the shooter. I would imagine that mastering that aspect of shooting pistols is probably the hardest part to account for. Given that understanding, I find it hard to understand why so many rounds were discharged in this instance.
I appreciate that in all aspects of life, one will come across failures in procedures that one has undertaken on hundreds of previous occasions without error. I encounter that myself in my work, although in a very different way of course. However, those errors are made despite best efforts, and the most stringent attempts at precision. I am a locksmith, so precision is paramount to the work I do. I understand that some times, things just do not go perfectly. However, there is a difference between failing to attain a perfect result despite taking care to avoid failure, and failing to even give yourself a chance to succeed, and that is how this situation looks from my perspective.
That said, perhaps my perspective lacks something. As you rightly pointed out, a middle ground between the ideal and the practical is often beneficial to solving a problem or understanding a given event. Perhaps the middle ground here is my lack of experience, rather than anything else. That said, in the interests of understanding this scenario specifically, I would love to hear a sound reason for unloading seven rounds at a target who is in close proximity to a hostage. I need to understand this better.edit on 4-4-2014 by TrueBrit because: Grammatical error correction.
cosmicexplorer
And lets also add this....the bastard that took this girl hostage in the end is the one at fault. Sure the officer may have and most likely was negligent. Whenever there is a shooting there is a pretty detailed review...I know it said he was cleared of wrong doing but that could mean the departments training or operating procedure called for him to respond in a certain way. If that is the case its possible the department could be sued id wager. My gut tells me there was an "active shooter" scenario at play and we just arent getting that detail yet. But that is pure speculation.edit on 4-4-2014 by cosmicexplorer because: (no reason given)
originally posted by: Mamatus
I will not debate this incident with anyone. The point the OP made is that the trend for death by cop is WAY on the increase. Please don't lose yourselves in the particulars of this one incident. Getting lost in the particulars of a single incident is nothing more than a distraction from the OP's point. Here let me help.
THE COPS ARE KILLING WAY TO OFTEN AND FOR WAY TOO LITTLE. I never used to get scared during a traffic stop, not being a criminal and having insurance, registration and whatnot I should not be afraid. Sadly I am very afraid. One wrong move and the cops shoot first ask later.
This is not the America I dreamed of living in. I am mad as hell but without one clue as to how to change it. So instead of going to a cops home that has abused his power and killing the SOB myself..... I whine on ATS.
I am embarrassed to be such a wimp.