American1776
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I'm not surprised that the FBI is going back to the 9mm.
As to the Miami shootout disaster: we saw a similar 'blame the equipment' mentality after a LE disaster during the aftermath of the Munich Olympic Games terrorist attacks. After the German police failed to rescue the hostages, there was a large overhaul of their pistols, which were at the time, 7,65mm pocket type pistols. The Germans demanded a 9mm, an 8 shot gun, no thumb safety. The HK P7, Walther P5, and Sig P6 were the resultant pistols.
With the FBI shootout, an autopsy showed that one of the agent's 9mm Silvertips had entered the arm and chest cavity of one of the killers (Matiz?) early in the gunfight, but it had stopped just short of the heart. The killer went on to commit more carnage.
They made the 10mm, then found quickly that most agents could not handle this 'magnum' like auto loader. Then they made it the 10mm 'lite', then finally the .40 S&W round. The .40 S&W still has a reputation of being a snappy handful for non-gun enthusiasts (which are a great many LEO's).
Physics is physics. Either you can have a pistol that everyone can shoot well and give up a little in the muzzle energy department, or you can go up in muzzle energy and have a gun that is harder to shoot well. There's a reason the .38 spl. was such a popular LE round for so long, despite its reputation as an impotent fight stopper with early round nose rounds. It was easy to shoot for people who didn't like to practice a whole lot, and the guns were easy to carry all day.
9mm with proper loads is a good fight stopper. It is cheap for practice, and is light in recoil. It doesn't beat up the pistols like 40 or .357 sig. Makes sense
As to the Miami shootout disaster: we saw a similar 'blame the equipment' mentality after a LE disaster during the aftermath of the Munich Olympic Games terrorist attacks. After the German police failed to rescue the hostages, there was a large overhaul of their pistols, which were at the time, 7,65mm pocket type pistols. The Germans demanded a 9mm, an 8 shot gun, no thumb safety. The HK P7, Walther P5, and Sig P6 were the resultant pistols.
With the FBI shootout, an autopsy showed that one of the agent's 9mm Silvertips had entered the arm and chest cavity of one of the killers (Matiz?) early in the gunfight, but it had stopped just short of the heart. The killer went on to commit more carnage.
They made the 10mm, then found quickly that most agents could not handle this 'magnum' like auto loader. Then they made it the 10mm 'lite', then finally the .40 S&W round. The .40 S&W still has a reputation of being a snappy handful for non-gun enthusiasts (which are a great many LEO's).
Physics is physics. Either you can have a pistol that everyone can shoot well and give up a little in the muzzle energy department, or you can go up in muzzle energy and have a gun that is harder to shoot well. There's a reason the .38 spl. was such a popular LE round for so long, despite its reputation as an impotent fight stopper with early round nose rounds. It was easy to shoot for people who didn't like to practice a whole lot, and the guns were easy to carry all day.
9mm with proper loads is a good fight stopper. It is cheap for practice, and is light in recoil. It doesn't beat up the pistols like 40 or .357 sig. Makes sense