ND into suspect: https://www.calibrepress.com/2016/12...8d9b-177265417
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ND into suspect: https://www.calibrepress.com/2016/12...8d9b-177265417
http://img.pandawhale.com/52252-Geor...y-We-t9bE.jpeg
He's lucky I am not a boss in that PD. I'd instantly reassign every single person who was responsible for that officer being qualified with a firearm.
Be safe out there.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXHYccMSkJ4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuMTj0wT6Cs
Hands guys, hands, it ain't a joke.
Don't see this much these days, officers properly uses deadly force to stop an armed, fleeing carjacking suspect:
http://www.denverpost.com/2016/11/28...r-old-suspect/
(And I'm amazed that in 2016, someone can't hookup the park kill function on the siren)
The door poppers can definitely save your butt! It's really hard to comment when you don't know the experience level of the dog. How long has he worked the streets? How many street bites does he have? How "hard" is the dog and what kind of training does he have to prepare for the 1%er? That was a good leg bite but he released and seemed confused. The more pressure you put on a dog in training the better he'll perform on the street.
Ugh. I made the mistake of reading some of the article's comments. My brain is hurting now
Shoot it's not just the lights they pick up the click the mic makes when you pull it from the clasp, the first click of the lights being turned, the beep from the radio encryption kicking in etc. They know all of this could mean time to play.
On traffic stops my guy barks the whole time I'm out of the car. It's a good deterrent.
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http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/2016...0b6781f2fd.jpg
Never get out of the boat!
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Satire...But funny.
Got some of that "protein" powder in there
Recent incident involving a deputy in the county just north of me.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdsnjn3PwcI
The deputy is certainly lucky to be alive after this incident. This could've been much worse, especially considering his reluctance to respond with lethal force in a more timely fashion.
Quite a few WTF? moments there. Thanks for posting. I'm really glad the deputy survived the encounter.
Listened to a podcast the other day that spent a good time talking about warrior mindset. Watching that video made me think of just that and how this guy needs to try to learn it.
I just HAVE to know the back story on this. What was the call? Why did the deputy jump the fence into the yard? What was all the random noise throughout, and what was the deputy doing, waiting for the shooter to return?
And, I will NOT judge someone else's actions under fire, but, DAMN, son! Luck (and bad shit head shooting) is the only reason that deputy made it out that day.
Original call was for a welfare check.
Here's a transcript of the highlights composed by someone else
Quote:
"OK, for those like me with short attention spans, here are some approximate time markers/call summary notes:
01:00 minute mark: Deputy jumps locked property entry gate
04:41: knock on property door, "Hello..." (no ID as po-po) dogs bark
05:13: Deputy again starts calling, "Hello..." (no ID as po-po) dogs continue barking
06:25: deputy begins knocking on doors/windows
06:56: can hear footsteps, deputy knocks again at another location
07:22: more knocks on property walls/doors
08:35: deputy runs GA/plate of Toyo Tacoma in driveway
09:28: suspect vehicle arrives in view of patrol car ICV, visibly armed, surveys empty patrol car
09:59: deputy radio traffic; aforementioned vehicle in driveway, no one answering door
- simultaneously, suspect opens entry gate to property
10:25: suspect in view of ICV walking around patrol car
10:50: suspect pulls his truck inside of property, exits his truck, and fires two (2) rounds at the patrol car."
- deputy hears shots and yells off camera, "Whoah! Sheriff's Office! Sheriff's Office!"
11:04: deputy broadcasts, "Shots fired," off camera.
Female passenger can be seen exiting passenger side of suspect truck
11:07: deputy again calls out, "Sheriff's Office!"
11:29: suspect closes and LOCKS property entry gate
11:53: suspect leads female passenger back to the truck, drives into property and out of ICV view
12:00: deputy says, "Sheriff's Office," and truck approach can be heard on deputy's portable mic
12:07: deputy yells *unintelligible*
12:10: deputy yells, "Put it down, put it down! Please! Put it down!"
12:14: deputy yells, "No! No!"
- 1 shot heard, 2nd shot one second after
12:30: deputy back in ICV view running towards patrol car, but without his patrol jacket on
12:35: suspect now in ICV view running after deputy down driveway towards patrol car
12:45: deputy clears climbing over gate, out of camera presumably at rear of patrol car
12:49: deputy yells, "Please, please don't do it!"
12:50: suspect arrives at entry gate and begins to fire upon the deputy
12:51: deputy returns fire and suspect clutches RT side with LFT hand, appears to have taken a round, then takes cover behind the gatepost
12:56 after a volley of fire (suspect fires 2 more times, deputy fires once after inital exchange), suspect disengages and runs back up the driveway and out of view of the ICV
13:00: deputy broadcasts, "I'm hit!"
13:14: deputy is back in vehicle, backs out of driveway
13:22: deputy is back onto the roadway and drives away (following all traffic laws)
14:45: deputy has now controlled breathing enough and calmed down enough to broadcast that he is shot, suspect hit at least one time
15:20: deputy broadcasted, "I think I was just grazed."
Assuming the suspect had a gun and shot officer 1. Aside from the whole why did they allow a suspect to keep his hands in his pockets (DGF how cold it is), but is first aid not something that is taught at Academy? Officer #2 seemed like he had no clue what was happening.
Skip to around 4:20 (har har) and watch from there.
https://vimeo.com/197215943
Few things I noticed:
zero confirmation of contact down / not a threat anymore
zero attempt to disarm the contact in the immediate future (this is a priority btw)
one officer runs after a possible victim or another possible shooter (no sound so difficult to tell if they were shooting at each other).
90% of the responding officers on scene did nothing and therefore should not have arrived - yes I know its an assist, but do something
crime scene tape? can they not afford it?
medical treatment? why bother right?
lastly - zero hesitation from the officers that pulled up, guns out, used vehicle as cover and put bullets on the threat immediately, good stuff.
New or adrenaline spike are both scary as crap. I though that selection and training was supposed to weed out as best as possible the deer in the headlights folks. I know we aren't talking SMU level screening and training here, but that kind if reaction can't be allowed to happen when real people are bleeding.
This is probably a topic worthy of its own thread, but honestly what else do we expect from modern academies and modern police training? It is the best* - asterisk is for lowest common denominator of training to meet state or city mandated requirements set forth by who? Paper pushing top brass who have not worked the street in decades and are as out of touch from street/patrol work as they are believe street/patrol workers are with "administrative functions" and my favorite bullshit phrase - "the bigger picture" of policing.
That younger officer failed the moment he stepped foot into that academy because the instructors at that academy failed the moment they took that position to teach that bullshit. Their supervisors failed the moment they agreed/signed off on that training and everyone above them failed for not allowed competency in training evolution.
The simple fact is that what worked 30 years ago may still work, but newer methods and newer concepts have been developed to allow for, in some areas of street/patrol work, to be radically different.
I have personally experienced both sides of this coin and that is why I seek out and find new types of training and point out shortcomings whenever possible, especially to LE. If we do not seek to evolve, we are setting our younger counterparts to a brutal awakening. But that is what goes on daily in LE training facilities in this country.
Do some try to change it? Yeah, totally, most of the time with good intentions but piss poor executions. People throw out the term "budget" as if that will help that officer get medical attention or, provide TQ's for the victims of the Boston Marathon bombing. All of a sudden budgets change to accommodate deficiencies experienced , funny how that seems to work...
What a charming individual.
Fighting in a stairwell is never fun. Those ASP strikes aren't going to have much power behind them when you can't wind up your arm without hitting a wall. Similarly, deploying spray in a confined stairwell when you're below the target doesn't seem like a very good idea either. They are very lucky he didn't have a gun or the desire to use it. The suspect could have fired either through the gate or the window and had them dead to rights before they could have made it back down the stairs to cover. That was a tense video.