WGB Wrote:Those comments do not accurately represent ANY of the officers or departments that I have ever been acquainted with.
One department I'm sure you're not acquainted with is the NYPD. Glock created the "New York Trigger" because of the AD (Accidental Discharge) problem so many NYPD officers were having. However, it DOES accurately represent ALL of the departments with which I am acquainted.
A number of years ago, I shot the "Bonus Course" at the LAPD Training Academy. This course is part of the LAPD Advanced Pistol Course, which is a speed and accuracy course, and is called "Bonus" because officers who qualify receive a "Bonus" in their monthly pay envelope. Depending on how well they qualify, this bonus can be as much as 8 to 10 percent. Which in my book is quite a nice bit of cash.
Well, the first time I shot the course, I was shooting a brace of Colt's Single Action revolvers. LAPD officers of course use their duty autoloaders. To shorten this up a bit; when the results came back, I had beat 90 percent of the LAPD.
I went back the next year and shot a 45 caliber 1911 long slide. This time I beat 97 percent of the LAPD. And as you probably know, 45 ACP has much higher recoil than the 9mm and 40 S&W, which are the most commonly used calibers in police departments today.
Another interesting incident:
I went out to the gun club one Sunday to test some loads in 44 Magnum -- chronograph them, shoot paper to check for accuracy, that sort of thing. While heading to one of the back bays, a friend stopped me to talk for a while. He was RO-ing on a stage of a three-gun match. He invited me to shoot that stage for a lark. I told him all I had with me was a Single Action Ruger Super Blackhawk and a Marlin Model 94 rifle, both of which were chambered in 44 mag. He said, "That's okay, go ahead and shoot them."
I watched a couple of guys shoot the course and then shot it myself.
You started in a shooters box on the right side of the bay, and while moving to a shooters box on the left, you fired six shots onto an IPSC target about 15 yards in front of you. You had to be moving, and you had to shoot all six shots before you stepped into the left side shooters box. Once you were in the left box, you reloaded and did the same thing moving back to the first box while firing on a target about 20 yards in front. Everyone shot autoloaders, but when I got to the left box, I had to reload my single action from loose cartridges in my shirt pocket. It wasn't just a simple mag change.
Anyway, when you got back to the starting place in the right box, you holstered your handgun, picked up your long gun (which was fully loaded -- in my case with 13 rounds) and fired six shots on another target about 30 yards in front of you while moving forward. Then you stepped into another shooters box (both feet) and without having to reload, you stepped out of the box and fired another six rounds on a target around 35 yards away while moving backward to your original position. The clock stopped when you stepped back into the original shooters box.
My reload was a bit fumbly, having to load from my pocket, but all my shots were in the "A"-Zones and my time wasn't all that bad -- even though I was shooting hot 44 mags instead of the 9mm and 223's that most people were shooting.
After I finished testing my loads and the match was over, my friend came by and told me why he wanted me to shoot that match with my single action and lever gun. It seems that some of the shooters there that day were members of the Huntington Beach SWAT team. And they were in his Squad. After every stage they shot, they were "high five"-ing, and "You The Man"-ing each other, while they were turning in the worst times and accuracy scores in the group. I gather that seeing themselves get handily beat by someone shooting 19th century-type guns -- guns with considerably heavier recoil than their 9mm Beretta's, AR's and MP-5's, was a rather sobering experience. My friend told me that after seeing my score and comparing it with their own scores, the high fiving stopped.
Then there's the "Friendship Match" at Lake Elsinore Combat, between us "civilians," and cops from all over Southern Califnordia. There were 44 entries; 23 "civilians," and 21 cops. Most of the cops claimed to be the best shots in their respective departments. The highest finishing cop placed 17th, the second highest cop finished 25th, and it was cops all the rest of the way to the bottom of the list.
When I was Match Director for Combat Matches, the occasional cop would show up -- having heard about the match -- with his chest out, his shoulders back, his gut sucked in, and intending to show these civilians "how it was done." They invariably finished DFL, (Dead F***ing Last) and went away with their tails between their legs even though I almost emplored them to come back and shoot again; "That's the only way you're going to get better. After all, we shoot these matches every month!" Only one cop did come back. And he got to be pretty good.
I can relate other experiences, but this is enough for now.
Anyway, that pretty much sums up my experiences with cops and shooting.
Ken V.