Have you ever had to draw your weapon for self defense?

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So I want to clarify, Oklahoma is an open carry state. Are you saying that you would prone out somebody that you saw just minding their own business with an openly displayed firearm in a holster. You'd prone somebody out for an absolutely legal activity?

True story bro, I would have your badge and a fat settlement check before that one was all over.

You might want to Google Sorensen V Colorado Springs

$23,500 to be exact . . .

Subhead | News | gazette.com
 
What come to mind is the need to carry the sort of liability insurance that covers attorney and court costs in the event of a shooting. Even in the event of a justified shooting, as appears to the case you describe, it is likely the shooting will go to court. For me it helps eliminate unnecessary hesitancy in a situation where I need to defend myself, through that theory has yet to be tested.
 
Believe that if you wish, but the responding officer(s) generally cannot initially tell friend from foe, so they are likely to treat all as foes. It's just the world in which we live.
I believe it because it's true.

One guy bought his & hers motorcycles with his settlement money.

I took home a fair amount myself.

You see, there's a difference between speculation and experience. ;)
 
... You see, there's a difference between speculation and experience. ;)

Funny, after eleven years I transferred to a more (then-) conservative area of the State and became quite comfortable interacting with armed Citizens. I believe the more armed Citizens there are, the safer the Community is that you serve.
 
Drew on a guy once. I walked in on break-in at the apartments I was living in at the time. He didn’t care for me being there and turned towards me with the crowbar he had just used on the door.

Was about a twitch away from drawing one other time. A panhandler/mugger who was clearly trying to maneuver around me and my family to strike.

Had my hand on the gun butt a few times passing by the Charlois bull while crossing the pasture.
 
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Working as a bartender, when I was a 20-something, with no formal firearms training and zero handgun experience (although I did have a subscription to Soldier of Fortune magazine) and very little impulse control, a guy with a bloody chef's knife tried to come behind the bar. We had an S&W in a cigar box, under the register. By the time I had the gun in hand, the guy with the knife was very close to me, maybe 6 or 8 feet away. Holding the revolver (I think it was probably a Model 36), with both hands, front sight right between his eyes, "Take one more step, and you're a dead man." He froze. "Put down the knife". He did. Everyone else, in the bar cheered and clapped!

As he turned and started to leave, 2 more guys came running in, one of them dropping the first guy, with a flying drop kick (ala All-Star Wrestling). Then the police showed up. Turns out, the first guy had pulled the knife on the other 2, trying to rob them. They managed to turn the knife on him. It was his own blood on the knife, and he was trying to get away from them, seeking refuge in the bar.

When all the dust settled, my boss asked me why I didn't just shoot the guy. After all, he had a huge knife, and was well within its striking distance. It very likely it would have been seen as a justifiable shoot, but I thank God every day that I didn't pull the trigger. To be clear, if dude had made even the slightest move, in my direction, I was ready to disconnect his brain stem.

I like to think that, maybe, the knife-guy re-evaluated his life choices, and became a model citizen. At the vey least, he was afforded a second chance.
 
A little off topic but illustrative of today’s political climate: A county officer in my state is on trial for involuntary manslaughter b/c he shot an unarmed man. Circumstances were the suspect stole sunglasses and was being chased from a shopping mall by the officer. He stopped, facing the officer and was digging into his waistband or pocket after the officer repeatedly warned him to show his hands. The officer drew his weapon & warned the suspect again, but he came out with was later determined to be a cell phone and was killed by the officer. I’m not sure if it was dark, or dusk, but I think the case is over a year old. I’m glad to be retired and am trying to talk my 24 y/o grandson out of being a cop.
 
A little off topic but illustrative of today’s political climate: A county officer in my state is on trial for involuntary manslaughter b/c he shot an unarmed man. Circumstances were the suspect stole sunglasses and was being chased from a shopping mall by the officer. He stopped, facing the officer and was digging into his waistband or pocket after the officer repeatedly warned him to show his hands. The officer drew his weapon & warned the suspect again, but he came out with was later determined to be a cell phone and was killed by the officer. I’m not sure if it was dark, or dusk, but I think the case is over a year old. I’m glad to be retired and am trying to talk my 24 y/o grandson out of being a cop.

I wish I was on that jury. The worst result would be a hung jury.
 
I’m glad to be retired and am trying to talk my 24 y/o grandson out of being a cop.

IMO if he chooses that path, he studies ethics, psychology and tactics beyond what the academy offers.

Read people, know when and how to deescalate and how to survive if things go wrong.

There are so many videos online of cops not respecting citizens civil rights that would not exist with better training.
 
A little off topic but illustrative of today’s political climate: A county officer in my state is on trial for involuntary manslaughter b/c he shot an unarmed man. Circumstances were the suspect stole sunglasses and was being chased from a shopping mall by the officer. He stopped, facing the officer and was digging into his waistband or pocket after the officer repeatedly warned him to show his hands. The officer drew his weapon & warned the suspect again, but he came out with was later determined to be a cell phone and was killed by the officer. I’m not sure if it was dark, or dusk, but I think the case is over a year old. I’m glad to be retired and am trying to talk my 24 y/o grandson out of being a cop.

On my way home I heard on WMAL that this is a Fairfax County, VA case. Disgusting.

I live in MD in the Bethesda/Chevy Chase area.
 
IMO if he chooses that path, he studies ethics, psychology and tactics beyond what the academy offers.

Read people, know when and how to deescalate and how to survive if things go wrong.

There are so many videos online of cops not respecting citizens civil rights that would not exist with better training.

You do realize that many of these videos have been edited to reflect a particular view of cops?
 
Yes. Do not take my comments as being anti LE.
A lot of the 'auditors' are real asses but too many LE are ignorant of the constitution and unnecessarily aggressive. Otherwise, the videos would not flourish.
 
A little off topic but illustrative of today’s political climate: A county officer in my state is on trial for involuntary manslaughter b/c he shot an unarmed man. Circumstances were the suspect stole sunglasses and was being chased from a shopping mall by the officer. He stopped, facing the officer and was digging into his waistband or pocket after the officer repeatedly warned him to show his hands. The officer drew his weapon & warned the suspect again, but he came out with was later determined to be a cell phone and was killed by the officer. I’m not sure if it was dark, or dusk, but I think the case is over a year old. I’m glad to be retired and am trying to talk my 24 y/o grandson out of being a cop.
Even 30 years ago a cop shooting an unarmed criminal was not Ok.

Should the criminal you posted about go to jail, yep.
But death over stolen merchandize, and scaring a cop, come on?

I don't know the details, was the criminal 100% mentally able to make a good decision? Meaning not deaf, on drugs, understand English, etc?
Again I wasn't there, but the info you posted tells me there should be an alive criminal in jail.

There absolutely should be penalties for killing people that shouldn't be killed, I mean that isn't a political climate thing, it's just being a decent human.
 
I wish I was on that jury. The worst result would be a hung jury.
This thinking is why we have the distrust of LE we do today. If they were held accountable for their actions we wouldn't see these stories so often.

I'm trying to think of when killing an unarmed criminal would be acceptable.
I'm coming up short of examples.
 
Yeah, LEOs should always be required to wait until an uncooperative criminal actually FIRES a weapon at them before they respond with deadly force.

Assuming that what a fleeing criminal suspect is pulling out of their waistband is a gun is completely unreasonable. Ergo, NOT waiting for the fleeing criminal suspect to actually fire a weapon at the responding LEO, before the LEO uses deadly force to neutralize the perceived threat, is clearly murder.

LEOs should be required to give fleeing, and uncooperative criminal suspects the benefit of the doubt - up to and including letting them take the first shot - before they use deadly force.

After all, that is only fair, right?

NOT!

I was always taught that I should comply with the orders of LEOs, and, if they were wrong, to address that issue later. If I'm running from the cops, refusing to obey their commands, and then pulling "something" out of my waistband, that just seems like I'm asking to get shot.

From everything I have seen, criminal suspects who COMPLY with commands issued by LEO's virtually NEVER get shot. Arrested? YES. Arrested unjustly? Sometimes. Shot and killed? NO. Are LEOs just trigger-happy cowboys LOOKING for an opportunity to shoot someone? NO. 99.999% of them just want to serve their community and make it a safer place.

I've yet to see a case of a compliant criminal suspect who was summarily executed by a LEO in the last 50 years. But, if anyone has actual documented cases of that happening, then please, enlighten me. Because I haven't seen it.
 
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On my way home I heard on WMAL that this is a Fairfax County, VA case. Disgusting.

I live in MD in the Bethesda/Chevy Chase area.

This thinking is why we have the distrust of LE we do today. If they were held accountable for their actions we wouldn't see these stories so often.

I'm trying to think of when killing an unarmed criminal would be acceptable.
I'm coming up short of examples.

Really easy for me.

The criminal doesn’t listen to police officer commands, doesn’t reveal his hands, continues to reach for, search for and grab something in his pocket, and draws it out.

The police officer was - and should have been - in fear of losing his life. It is unreasonable to require the police officer to wait to verify with certainty what the criminal is drawing is or isn’t a gun or other weapon. Waiting to verify with certainly is waiting to be shot.

Prosecuting the officer in this or similar cases teaches the criminals they do not have to listen to police commands even after they’ve been caught.

It also teaches police officers or potential future officers that the State’s Attorney (Commonwealth Attorney in VA) will prosecute them despite a very reasonable fear of losing their life, and so seriously discourages retention and recruitment and discourages officers from doing their jobs as well.

Wonder why crime has skyrocketed?
 
From everything I have seen, criminal suspects who COMPLY with commands issued by LEO's virtually NEVER get shot. Arrested? YES. Arrested unjustly? Sometimes. Shot and killed? NO. Are LEOs just trigger-happy cowboys LOOKING for an opportunity to shoot someone? NO. 99.999% of them just want to serve their community and make it a safer place.

I've yet to see a case of a compliant criminal suspect who was summarily executed by a LEO in the last 50 years. But, if anyone has actual documented cases of that happening, then please, enlighten me. Because I haven't seen it.

Have you seen any videos starring Daniel Shaver?
 
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