sarg1c
US Veteran
I agree with you on this one, never been there, but I live in a very calm area, really don't carry every day, but always when on the Interstate highway . Lucky I guess....Fortunately I have not been in that situation.
I agree with you on this one, never been there, but I live in a very calm area, really don't carry every day, but always when on the Interstate highway . Lucky I guess....Fortunately I have not been in that situation.
The first was in a bar, I was negotiating with a known bad guy to attempt to purchase more time to repay a debt from a smuggling operation gone bad. He brazenly placed his weapon on the table, pointed it right at me, in plain view of the other bar patrons. I played it cool and very carefully and quietly drew under the table from an OC thigh holster. Just before i was sure he was going to fire, I blasted him to pieces. He slumped down onto the table, quite a mess. It was a tough bar, the music only stopped for a moment, then the band continued on playing the same song as if nothing happened. To this day, some people say he fired first, when we all know he never fired a shot.
Riding the EL was a real adventure.
I'll take a wild guess, Red Line?
Good day, with all the people conceal carry today how many have been in a situation, that if you had not had your weapon things would have been completely different or deadly. Thank you
A couple of years ago I was visiting my elderly dad for a few days. He has an attached garage which he leaves the roll up front door to open during warm days to keep it cooler inside. Has all his tools, washer-dryer, workbenches, shelves etc in it. Just at dark I went out to the garage to close it up for him. The lights were off in it and initially I left them off as I could see well enough in there to roll down the door. Just before I did I decide to turn on the light and check out a portable TV he had on the workbench. Plug it in, see if he got it working. While I was messing with the TV I smelled cigarette smoke. Not like someone was smoking, but the smell regular smoker's have on them 24/7. Hair, clothing etc. I looked in the direction of the odor, towards the back of the garage and I saw him. Pressed up against the wall, back to it facing out, eyes closed and as I approached him he was muttering "I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Please don't hurt me". I'm a retired LEO, and he looked to me to be a doper. Tweaker. Probably went in the garage for a quick theft which I interrupted. I was also a lot bigger than him, but he looked about 10-15 years younger than me. He had his palms out showing he was unarmed. No doubt he was convinced I was armed, even though I wasn't. I was clad in cargo shorts, tank top and flip-flop sandals. Didn't even have my cell phone on me. My S&W 442 was in the house, next to my cellphone on a dresser, lol. I was in total condition green.
We had a stand-off for probably 30 seconds, the entire time I remember thinking to myself I wished I had my gun. As a former cop that was literally my first thought. To take the dude into custody. I decided my best choice of action was to back to the door, get inside, arm myself and call the SO, which I did. Of course the wannabe burglar had hauled butt before I came back out seconds later, armed and with a phone. He disappeared in the darkness of the suburbs.
Deadly force situation? Probably not. If I had the pistol on me initially he would have been looking down the barrel of it and and anything beyond that would have depended on his subsequent actions. This occurred in a state where the castle doctrine exists. Mind you, he looked scared witless, and his body english showed total submission and prior encounters with cops, even though he did not know I had been one.
I was a bit hard on myself later for not being able to take the guy into custody, but heck, I'm simply not going to walk around the house all day with that 442 tucked in my skivvies 24/7. I'm just glad my elderly dad wasn't the one that confronted the bad guy. Most important thing is nobody got hurt.
Definitely twice, once in movie theater, once on sidewalk downtown Columbus. Once more a maybe, mall parking lot. The gun never cleared the pocket. The wife was with me talking away on 2 & 3, she never noticed!
Ivan
One thing that I find very interesting is how carrying affects the one carrying. It's been my experience that the transition from not carrying to carrying often makes a person more observant. By being more aware and choosing your situations more carefully, the chances of needing said gun are much less.Good day, with all the people conceal carry today how many have been in a situation, that if you had not had your weapon things would have been completely different or deadly. Thank you
Only a mercy shot on a deer.
I hope it stays that way.
One thing that I find very interesting is how carrying affects the one carrying. It's been my experience that the transition from not carrying to carrying often makes a person more observant. By being more aware and choosing your situations more carefully, the chances of needing said gun are much less.
Where I live they call that poaching.![]()
Finishing off a wounded deer with a handgun (instead of a close-range rifle shot to the head) during an open hunting season is poaching?![]()
Sorry, I was thinking finishing off roadkill.![]()