View Single Post
Old December 5, 2011, 01:28 PM   #26
federali
Senior Member
 
Join Date: August 1, 2011
Location: Nassau County NY
Posts: 378
Sleuth is Correct

Early in my LE career, I received training from the range staff of NYPD. Now, at times NYPD was close to 40,000 officers and they averaged a shooting incident daily. When the range staff says something about shooting incidents, best that you listen.

They said: you will do on the street what you have been trained to do, conditioned yourself to do or got away with in training. Now, for the horror stories:
1. An officer suffers a stoppage in a gunbattle, stands up and raises his hand.
2. An officer, while taking fire, fires two rounds and reholsters.
3.A wounded officer (New Hall Incident) attempts to finish loading the cylinder of his revolver while his adversary advances to deliver an execution shot.
4. Numerous cases of dead officers found with empty shell casings in their hand or in their pocket.
5. An officer, upon seeing his partner engaged in a gunbattle, does not fire on the adversary as he is located somewhat behind him. Instead, he wastes precious seconds to run around the adversary in order to face him head on, just like the silhouette targets in training.
6. An officer shoots his autoloader dry and to slide lock. He catches the empty magazine to put in his pocket when he should have discarded it and get reloaded and back in the fight.

As a result of item 4 above, trainers did away with brass buckets and retrained their men to eject shell casings on the ground, not in their hand for tossing into the bucket.

In a gunbattle, your conscious mind shuts down and your subsconscious takes over. Program it with good stuff and it responds with good stuff. Best not to develop bad range habits for the sake of convenience.
__________________
Int'l Assoc. of Law Enforcement Firearms Instructors
federali is offline  
 
Page generated in 0.02734 seconds with 8 queries