blisteringsilence
I'd rather hunt with Cheney than ride with Kennedy
+83|7129|Little Rock, Arkansas

Kmarion wrote:

Elamdri wrote:

Pepper spray is shit, I doubt even Chemical Mace would have affected him.
Have you ever been sprayed with pepper spray? It's hard to hit someone with an axe when you can't see.

Kmarion wrote:

N.A.T.O wrote:

He did the right thing...Pepper spay on a crazy man charging with a frickin axe??? If he had used pepper spay the headline would have been 1 police officer seriously wounded and 1 man dead after confrontation.
You don't understand.. You physically can not see. I don't care if you are crazy or not. Providing you get a good shot.
I don't know if anyone else on these boards has ever been sprayed with chem mace other than I, so let's talk about it.

Here's the exercise we had to do in training:

1. Approach a suspect. You are wearing your duty belt. You have nothing in your hands. The suspect has his hands behind his back. Close to 6 feet of the suspect, and demand to see hands.

2. The suspect maces you.

3. You must now run 10 yards, remove your ASP, extend it, and hit a dummy with it with three disabling hits.

4. You must now run 10 more yards, collapse and holster the ASP, draw your weapon, and fire 3 shots into the Q of a target 5 yards from the firing line.

5. You must now retreat 20 yards to safety while safing and holstering your weapon, and calling for help on your radio. The call must include your identification, location, and situation, along with a request for backup.

And you know what? Everyone in my class passed it successfully. And none of us were crazy or on drugs.

The internationally accepted standard is that anyone within 21 feet holding an edged weapon is an immeadiate deadly threat, and can be engaged with deadly force.

weasel_thingo wrote:

a few weeks ago in perth a similar thing happend, guy stabed a policemen and then he got shot 3 times and was killed by the stabbed cop. i dont think he should have shot him 3 times maybe once at the most. but an axe is alot more dangerous and by the time he gets close enough to be pepper sprayed he would have killed the cop.
Bullshit. Anything worth shooting once is worth shooting until it hits the ground. Deadly force is just that. That's why there's no distinction between shooting someone once or three times or 41 times.

Kmarion wrote:

http://www.amazon.com/Bear-Repellent-Pepper-Animal-Deterrent/dp/B0006DVNT8 No need to get close. I'm not talking about the mini ones the girls carry around. Don't you ever watch Dog the bounty hunter? ..lol
I don't know what Dog carries, but this is what's issued to us:

http://www.sabrered.com/Default.aspx?tabid=56

We use the red forumlation in a stream deployment. The guys in the jail use something else, its a similar forumlation, but in a fogger, like the link you provided. On the street you would never use a fogger, it'd cause as much harm to you as to the suspect.
Parker
isteal
+1,452|6821|The Gem Saloon
hey blistering silence.....you and i must have been thinking 21 feet at the same time
blisteringsilence
I'd rather hunt with Cheney than ride with Kennedy
+83|7129|Little Rock, Arkansas

Metallicatt wrote:

SHITE!!

The Police here have a hard enough time doing their normal job, let alone have to deal with this stuff.
I don't feel that this officer should be under review. By the sounds of it, they saved their partners life.

(No, I am not a Police Officer myself)

I keep thinking, SHOOT AT THEIR LEGS or something, but when in that kind of situ, with possibly a split-second decision. I suppose it comes down to a life for a life.

I often wonder, "What if it wasn't a Police Officer, but a normal citizen, who killed an attacker".

Thinking what our judicial system is like, the Defender will probably be sent to jail, and the Attacker's family would file a law suit and get some sort of compensation for their loss.

CRAP!!!!
I don't know how to convey this well, but I'm going to try:

Anytime a pistol is fired, you are using deadly force. You can bleed out just as easily from a nicked femoral artery as you can from a nicked aorta (that's leg vs chest). No LEO in the world is trained to take a "disabling" shot. If you're going to discharge your weapon, you shoot to kill. No second thoughts. No "aiming for the arms or legs." You shoot at the biggest target (the torso), and you keep shooting until the target goes down. End of story.

Now, I have no problem with investigating the shooting. Everytime a LEO discharges a weapon here in the states, all kinds of paperwork has to be filed, an investigation is done, and a judgement rendered. And that's a good thing.
blisteringsilence
I'd rather hunt with Cheney than ride with Kennedy
+83|7129|Little Rock, Arkansas

Parker wrote:

hey blistering silence.....you and i must have been thinking 21 feet at the same time
Pretty much, yeah. Edged weapon, 21 feet. It's the standard used all over the world. Now, I know a LOT of people, officers and civilians both, that think 21 feet is too close. They make good arguments.

BTW, and totally off topic, where in STL do you live? I grew up right outside of Normandy.
Parker
isteal
+1,452|6821|The Gem Saloon
ya, my job sorta requires me to know the 21 foot rule by heart...
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pid=977621
.....and ya i agree, i could cover more distance with a blade faster than someone could aquire me in their sites and hit me.

im in crestwood, right at 44 & 270, pretty far south of where you used to be.

edit: and the more i think about it......i would change it to 50 fuckin feet if someone has an axe. i wonder with the leverage, and the strength with the adrenaline, how far it could be thrown??

Last edited by Parker (2007-02-21 00:48:52)

blisteringsilence
I'd rather hunt with Cheney than ride with Kennedy
+83|7129|Little Rock, Arkansas

HunterOfSkulls wrote:

bob_6012 wrote:

The thought that some people wanted to use pepper spray is just ludicrous. If I have my gun drawn and someone charges me with an axe why would I lower/holster my weapon and then fumble around trying to get the pepper spray out? Think about it people. I side with the police officer 100%.
IMO, standard operating procedure when dealing with a subject who's potentially violent but clearly not armed with a firearm should be to have the spray out and held at low-ready, have someone also ready to cover them with a firearm in case the spray doesn't work. Unfortunately most of the training in less-than-lethal weapons seems to be either lax or totally disregarded in the field and police end up using them as pain compliance devices for unarmed or non-violent individuals.
hmmmmm. OCS doesn't work from low ready. Hell, you can't fire anything from low ready. If you're going to threaten a subject with a weapon, be it of the lethal or nonlethal variety, you'd better be prepared to use it. And that means having said weapon up and aimed at ready-fire.

The OP was about a subject with an edged weapon (hell, one on a handle) advancing toward a pair of officers. As soon as he got close to the 21 foot line, and was still ignoring my commands, I'd start firing. And hell, I'm a paramedic.

And I don't know that I agree with your statements on less-lethal weapons and devices. We went through extensive training when they issued us our tazers. That's why we had to switch forumlations of pepper spray. We had to get one that was totally nonflammable. I think that as we gain more experience with them, we'll be able to better develop guidelines on how, when, and why we deploy them. Its a learning process, just like with any other new piece of gear.
Macca
Cylons' my kinda frak
+72|6873|Australia.
You see, in Australia, theres no such thing as "self-defence".
If someone breaks into your house, threatens you, so you decide to pull out a gun and shoot him, you're gonna end up more in the shit than they are.

But lately, alot of Cops over here have been starting to use their guns. Bout time I believe.
HunterOfSkulls
Rated EC-10
+246|6707

blisteringsilence wrote:

hmmmmm. OCS doesn't work from low ready. Hell, you can't fire anything from low ready. If you're going to threaten a subject with a weapon, be it of the lethal or nonlethal variety, you'd better be prepared to use it. And that means having said weapon up and aimed at ready-fire.

The OP was about a subject with an edged weapon (hell, one on a handle) advancing toward a pair of officers. As soon as he got close to the 21 foot line, and was still ignoring my commands, I'd start firing. And hell, I'm a paramedic.

And I don't know that I agree with your statements on less-lethal weapons and devices. We went through extensive training when they issued us our tazers. That's why we had to switch forumlations of pepper spray. We had to get one that was totally nonflammable. I think that as we gain more experience with them, we'll be able to better develop guidelines on how, when, and why we deploy them. Its a learning process, just like with any other new piece of gear.
Well now this part would rely on the OP clarifying a bit. We don't know if the guy was pissed off at someone or if he was just plain bonkers. If he was mentally disturbed, I'd think the last thing they'd want would be to provoke the guy further. BTW, I am aware you can't fire anything from low-ready. I'm also aware that most folks are a lot calmer when stuff isn't being pointed directly at them and you greatly reduce your chances of an accidental discharge. But again, we don't know the specifics on this one yet.

As far as my statements on less-than-lethals, that comes out of documented instances of their use for pain compliance or use on non-violent subjects. I've seen video of officers swabbing pepper-spray directly into the eyes of environmental protestors, pictures of protestors in Oakland CA who'd been shot in the back and face with wooden baton rounds, video of a screaming woman pinned between two newspaper vending machines being pepper-sprayed by two smiling, laughing Portland cops, and plenty far worse. Beyond the emotionally and visually visceral stuff, I have read reports documenting the rise in use of less-than-lethals for purposes other than subduing violent suspects, ranging from traffic stops to simple failure to comply with an officer's instructions. Maybe it's just me, but it looks an awful lot like many cops think "less-than-lethal" means "I can use this and not get in a whole lot of trouble while still causing pain to this person who doesn't respect me enough". Portland cops have a terrible track record for that, including the tasering of a half-blind wheelchair-bound grandmother, pepper-spraying an infant and an elderly man on a motorized scooter and tasering another man in the back while he was walking away from them after being told to leave.

As far as the "learning process", I can understand that, but this learning process involves people suffering pain and injury when the cops either screw up or wilfully use less-than-lethals to inflict pain on people they think deserve it. Police are granted the authority to carry and use lethal and non-lethal weapons, detain, arrest and incarcerate people by the State; as such they need to be held to the highest and most stringent standards possible, not "there's a learning process" or rubber-stamp review boards.
blisteringsilence
I'd rather hunt with Cheney than ride with Kennedy
+83|7129|Little Rock, Arkansas

HunterOfSkulls wrote:

Well now this part would rely on the OP clarifying a bit. We don't know if the guy was pissed off at someone or if he was just plain bonkers. If he was mentally disturbed, I'd think the last thing they'd want would be to provoke the guy further. BTW, I am aware you can't fire anything from low-ready. I'm also aware that most folks are a lot calmer when stuff isn't being pointed directly at them and you greatly reduce your chances of an accidental discharge. But again, we don't know the specifics on this one yet.
It doesn't matter. He is a lethal threat. He had an edged weapon, and was ignoring police orders to halt.

One of the central tenats of law enforement is that you never, ever let someone who is a danger to others loose. You capture and detain, and let the courts take over.

The point of aiming a weapon at someone is not to negotiate with them. If you've drawn your weapon and aimed it, you've already made the decision to fire. If you can avoid it, good. If not, you're ready to go.

This is one of the things that pisses me off about movies and tv. People think that cops will negotiate with their weapons drawn. News flash kids. That ain't happening here in the real world. If you have a police officer's weapon aimed at you, the only position you should take is facedown on the ground with your hands as far from your body as possbile.

HunterOfSkulls wrote:

As far as my statements on less-than-lethals, that comes out of documented instances of their use for pain compliance or use on non-violent subjects. I've seen video of officers swabbing pepper-spray directly into the eyes of environmental protestors, pictures of protestors in Oakland CA who'd been shot in the back and face with wooden baton rounds, video of a screaming woman pinned between two newspaper vending machines being pepper-sprayed by two smiling, laughing Portland cops, and plenty far worse. Beyond the emotionally and visually visceral stuff, I have read reports documenting the rise in use of less-than-lethals for purposes other than subduing violent suspects, ranging from traffic stops to simple failure to comply with an officer's instructions. Maybe it's just me, but it looks an awful lot like many cops think "less-than-lethal" means "I can use this and not get in a whole lot of trouble while still causing pain to this person who doesn't respect me enough". Portland cops have a terrible track record for that, including the tasering of a half-blind wheelchair-bound grandmother, pepper-spraying an infant and an elderly man on a motorized scooter and tasering another man in the back while he was walking away from them after being told to leave.
The plural of anecdote is not data.

I can name at least three patients I have personally treated who's lives were saved by a tazer. If our department didn't have this device issued to every patrol officer, each of these men would have been shot and likely killed. We didn't have to. And that's good.

Now, my truism applies just as well to me. Does that mean that all uses of a tazer are situations that would have resulted in someone being shot? Nope. I know that the guys in the jail use tazers instead of pepper spray becuase they're 1. more threatening, and 2. make less of a mess.

I'm not excusing the actions of all police officers. There are without a doubt those that get out of line, abuse their authority. However, I'd like you to step over to the other side of the blue line for a second. What do you think its like to be between environmental protesters and what they're protesting? You're doing your job, and they're hurling insults, feeces, rocks, molotov cocktails, and who knows what else at you. Are you what they're protesting? Nope. But since you're the only thing they can take their anger out on, they do it, and its maddening.

I don't blame officers for firing beanbag rounds into threatening crowds. As soon as the first rock is thrown, I think it's justified.

I miss the days of nonviolent protests. You want to know why the movements at large conferences are ignored? No one cares about the plight of the folks involved. Joe Public looks at the protestors fleeing from the cops after they overturn a car or set something on fire, and think, man, what a bunch of wackjobs.

HunterOfSkulls wrote:

As far as the "learning process", I can understand that, but this learning process involves people suffering pain and injury when the cops either screw up or wilfully use less-than-lethals to inflict pain on people they think deserve it. Police are granted the authority to carry and use lethal and non-lethal weapons, detain, arrest and incarcerate people by the State; as such they need to be held to the highest and most stringent standards possible, not "there's a learning process" or rubber-stamp review boards.
Dude, you've obviously never sat through a shooting review board. There's nothing rubber stamp about it. And again, you can toss anecdotes at me all you want, and for every one you use, I'll have a positive one to toss back.

As far as pain control devices, I would argue that both pepper spray and tazers are better than the alternatives. Beanbag guns, batons, these weapons cause long lasting damage, both cosmetic and underlying. And I would never use "its a learning process" to excuse wrongdoing. Explain it, not excuse it. The whole of human history is filled with excesses that lead to a mean. This is yet another example.
HunterOfSkulls
Rated EC-10
+246|6707

blisteringsilence wrote:

It doesn't matter. He is a lethal threat. He had an edged weapon, and was ignoring police orders to halt.
Actually, since neither of us knows the details, we're both engaging in speculation based on a story being related to us second-hand by the OP. That said...

blisteringsilence wrote:

The plural of anecdote is not data.
You are absolutely correct sir.

Amnesty International article on police taser use.

In that article are sections focusing on taser use in general including concerns about potential lethality even when they're used "properly" and also discussion of six different states where tasers were used as pain compliance gainst restrained, immobile or physically non-threatening subjects. Included are the cases I previously mentioned from Portland of the elderly woman who was drive-stunned three times while being held down on the ground and the case where a man told to leave the scene of an arrest was tasered in the back and then drive-stunned about ten times while pinned down by several officers after he began walking away.

Oh and then there's pepper spray.

Officers Kruger and Hanousek of the Portland police, repeatedly pepper-spraying a woman pinned up against a newspaper machine and smiling the whole time.

Four women engaged in a non-violent sit down protest get pepper spray swabbed directly into their eyes by police officers, who record the entire thing on video apparently believing no one would care. link As a result of this incident, the federal appeals court in San Francisco ruled that it was an unconstitutional use of force on the part of police and placed limitations on its use. Similar incidents where police have used this tactic on non-violent protestors are numerous and documentation of same is easily found with a quick google.

blisteringsilence wrote:

Now, my truism applies just as well to me. Does that mean that all uses of a tazer are situations that would have resulted in someone being shot? Nope. I know that the guys in the jail use tazers instead of pepper spray becuase they're 1. more threatening, and 2. make less of a mess.
You forgot: 3. none of the other officers are going to say anything about it to anyone of consequence, which brings me to...

blisteringsilence wrote:

I'm not excusing the actions of all police officers. There are without a doubt those that get out of line, abuse their authority. However, I'd like you to step over to the other side of the blue line for a second. What do you think its like to be between environmental protesters and what they're protesting? You're doing your job, and they're hurling insults, feeces, rocks, molotov cocktails, and who knows what else at you. Are you what they're protesting? Nope. But since you're the only thing they can take their anger out on, they do it, and its maddening.
I'd suggest taking a look over the last few big incidents of protests where police used force against protestors. In Oakland, California on April 7th, protestors were hit with beanbag and baton rounds. In many cases they were shot in the back while fleeing and one woman was shot in the face while sitting on the ground. Video showed the officers discharging baton rounds directly at individual people even though the manufacturer's instructions (ironically found on the discarded casings of the rounds later picked up by protestors) clearly state that doing so may result in "serious injury and/or death". Claims that the protestors initiated it by throwing rocks and iron bolts were never substantiated. Similar justification was used for police force against protestors in Portland during the August 22, 2002 demonstration even though video later surfaced of police simply deciding to resort to CS, pepper spray and stingballs to disperse the crowd rather than to quell violent action. The problem is not just those that abuse their authority, it's the enablers that keep saying "Oh you don't know what it's like". It's the "blue line" you mentioned that causes police to close ranks against anyone who tries to take one of their own to task for abusing their authority. It's the hysterical stories that paint protestors as wild-eyed bomb-throwers in order to justify use of force. On this side of the blue line, after seeing the same cops engage in the same actions over and over again and seeing them defended by the entire department and even the entire law enforcement community, I've got shit worth of sympathy for them.

blisteringsilence wrote:

I don't blame officers for firing beanbag rounds into threatening crowds. As soon as the first rock is thrown, I think it's justified.
Except the problem is that the police are resorting to using less-than-lethals on non-threatening crowds and then falsifying pretext afterwards.

blisteringsilence wrote:

I miss the days of nonviolent protests. You want to know why the movements at large conferences are ignored? No one cares about the plight of the folks involved. Joe Public looks at the protestors fleeing from the cops after they overturn a car or set something on fire, and think, man, what a bunch of wackjobs.
That's because Joe Public mostly sees carefully edited footage that makes it to the news and hears commentary mainly in line with the official police version. You should have seen it on 8-22-02, nearly every news channel repeated the "protestors pushed over barricades and assaulted police" line, even though it didn't even remotely square with actual footage of that entire day. Clips of protestors "jumping on the hoods of police cars" was actually cut footage; unedited it showed the police cruisers driving into groups of protestors who then had the choice of either going on the hood or going under the wheels. Stuff like that didn't make the six o' clock news except on channel 12, whom the police apparently pushed too far by pepper-spraying their reporter and cameraman on the scene. The rest of the networks faithfully parroted the official story for Joe Public's consumption. They know that if they cast the police in too negative of a light, they miss out on stories that the police will give to other rival networks. These ARE the days of nonviolent protests; at best their attendance is lowballed by the media, at worst they're painted as violent nihilists so Joe Public's delicate sensibilities don't get upset by the sight of a 110-pound teenager lying on the ground with a 200+ pound cop's knee on the back of his head.

blisteringsilence wrote:

Dude, you've obviously never sat through a shooting review board. There's nothing rubber stamp about it. And again, you can toss anecdotes at me all you want, and for every one you use, I'll have a positive one to toss back.
No, I haven't sat through a shooting review board. I have followed three different recent cases where local police used deadly force against unarmed suspects. In each case the suspect was killed, in each case the review board found the shooting to be justified. I'm sure the process is involved and exhausting but I honestly can't recall with any clarity the last time an officer was found to have wrongly used deadly force.

blisteringsilence wrote:

As far as pain control devices, I would argue that both pepper spray and tazers are better than the alternatives. Beanbag guns, batons, these weapons cause long lasting damage, both cosmetic and underlying. And I would never use "its a learning process" to excuse wrongdoing. Explain it, not excuse it. The whole of human history is filled with excesses that lead to a mean. This is yet another example.
Yes, I'm sure it's better than a poke in the eye with a dirty stick. But essentially what you're saying is, "Sure you got beat with a club but it could have been worse, they could have sodomized you with it too". This is the modern version of the old phone book trick: hurt 'em, but don't leave any marks that can prove you did anything. And no, you haven't used "it's a learning process" to excuse wrongdoing. You've used the same old "everybody's against the cops, they don't know what it's really like" routine to do that. Just like I don't have to fly to know the sky is blue, I don't have to be a cop to know drive-stunning someone for mouthing off and walking away is wrong. I don't have to be a cop to know shooting a fleeing non-violent subject in the back or a seated person in the face with cylinders of wood delivering 90 foot-pounds of force is wrong. I definitley don't need to be a cop to know that protecting and defending someone who abuses their authority just because they wear the same uniform as me is flat-out wrong. Until the law enforcement community figures out that they're supposed to be protecting and serving everybody, not just the people they think are worthy of protection and service, I have zero respect for them.

I'll now end this hijack and return you all to your previously scheduled thread, all ready in progress.
Stingray24
Proud member of the vast right-wing conspiracy
+1,060|6872|The Land of Scott Walker
By the time the axe wielder is within pepper spray range, his weapon is waaaay to close to me.  I'd have shot him, too.
SgtHeihn
Should have ducked
+394|6914|Ham Lake, MN (Fucking Cold)

Elamdri wrote:

Pepper spray is shit, I doubt even Chemical Mace would have affected him.
Ok, I'll spray you with my 18% OC(pepper spray) and you tell me its not shit. I have been sprayed by both
(Marine Corps idea of training) OC was way worse, I would rather get beat with the baton.

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