The contact and cover protocal used on the street perhaps needs to be used in more familiar surroundings where officers congregate. Even the big wall street banks are limiting employees to groups of 11 while they wait for their firearms permits to repel the impending hoards of pissed off consumers. This story from DUF mailer reminds that training is a good start as well.
3 Dec 09
Gun Ignorance, even among "Professionals." This from a student and Chiropractor in the Midwest:
"A local, uniformed, patrol officer came in to my office last week, complaining of headaches and lower-back pain. She stated that pain was occurring while she was on duty, and mentioned that her duty-belt was uncomfortable.
I began by asking about her duty-pistol. She stated that it was a SIG. When I asked what model, she paused and answered, 'Why, it's a Sig/Sauer. Is there another kind?'
I let out a breath and then asked if the weapon's magazines were single or double-stack, what caliber, how many spare magazines she carried, and where she carried them. I got back a confused look, and then she asked me what 'double-stack' meant. In addition, she had no idea what caliber her pistol was, but we determined that both spare magazines were routinely carried on the same side as her pistol.
I asked if she practiced reloading her pistol with magazines carried thus. She indicated that she '... couldn't remember,' adding 'I don't know; I just carry them there.'"
Comment: In light of the recent WA ambush of uniformed officers, the foregoing is of great concern.
"Police" is not 'what we do.' It's 'what we ARE!' A blase, clueless officer, like this one, is in extreme danger every minute she is working, as is everyone she works with, and everyone she ostensibly "protects."
Her training officer and her chief, for everyone's sake, need to get her on-board, get her into some other kind of work, or plan on attending funeral(s)!
/John
(I assume that the above “interview” began as a chiropractor attempting to get to the source of the back pain; police duty belts are commonly implicated. From time to time I either see someone carrying openly in town or, worse yet, one of my students showing up with one of those “cool” holsters, with a magazine pouch mounted on the holster itself, just forward of the top of the slide of the pistol. The problem is that we normally retain the pistol in the shooting hand while reloading. Thus, those who carry concealed are better served by carrying spare magazines on the non-dominant side. In uniform, some functional officers may carry in a horizontal pouch, which, while worn on the dominant side, presents the base of the magazine to the non-dominant hand. An officer who has not done reloads in training, in the academy and in service, has been sold short. Perhaps she was merely flustered at that point, by the questions she was unable to answer but someone who can’t think on her feet needs to find another line of work. Yes, the plural on “spare magazines” is intentional – 99% of malfunctions will be resolved with a reload, with no need for further diagnosis.)
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