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Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

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Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

But why do they have an accuracy rate around the Mendoza Line?

How accurately do you think people shoot when their dodging bullets themselves? Real life soldiers and cops are more like Storm Troopers than they are John McClane from Die Hard.
 
How accurately do you think people shoot when their dodging bullets themselves? Real life soldiers and cops are more like Storm Troopers than they are John McClane from Die Hard.

When you pull the trigger, you should have a clear sight picture of the target. Spray and pray is for AK-47s.
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

When you pull the trigger, you should have a clear sight picture of the target. Spray and pray is for AK-47s.

And when a flurry of gun shots are headed in your general direction, how much time do police and soldiers take to aim their weapons? Are they getting a general aim, or a careful aim used during target practice? Muscle memory can only account for so much when your life is on the line.
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

I raised the question about target policy because in quite a few cases officers have been poised with their guns drawn and aimed when the suspect made the threatening move. They were already locked in. Not all, of course, but many seem to have been that way.
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

I raised the question about target policy because in quite a few cases officers have been poised with their guns drawn and aimed when the suspect made the threatening move. They were already locked in. Not all, of course, but many seem to have been that way.

I'm not sure there's a universal standard for when police are allowed to draw from the holster.
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-cards="hidden" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">LAPD commander and sergeant charged after police say they were drunk in unmarked cruiser <a href="https://t.co/s5UCHM2gmj">https://t.co/s5UCHM2gmj</a> <a href="https://t.co/fFmiFapZmE">pic.twitter.com/fFmiFapZmE</a></p>— Los Angeles Times (@latimes) <a href="https://twitter.com/latimes/status/1037121908599390210?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 4, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

I didn't think of that. There may be uniform protocol as to when they can even unholster?

I think, THINK, it's when you are in fear of your safety/life/etc etc or the safety of others and other methods would be considered ineffective (such as, a taser wouldn't work for a guy 100 yards away shooting up sh*).

That being said, I think that definition could be tightened up a bit. Or have the cops better trained. Better yet, don't hire people who are unfit for the job. The meatheads who just wanna shoot sh*.
 
Re: Cops 5: Barney Fife, Now in Real Life!

Or have the cops better trained. Better yet, don't hire people who are unfit for the job. The meatheads who just wanna shoot sh*.

For one, we can start by better vetting the ex-mil applicants. Being combat trained does not automatically make one well-suited for police work.
 
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