Same basic thing was said by a sheriff in Fl a couple of years back. After the initial comments never came up again that I've heard.
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I wouldn't interpret the Chief's statement as a threat, but a statement of fact. In the split second between identification and processing of a lethal encounter, of COURSE more plainclothes/civilian personnel will be injured by LEOs, especially in an environment like Chicago that isn't USED to civilian carry. The answer isn't to bash the civlians being able to carry, it's more training in shoot/don'tshoot of the officers. AND it would help to incorporate a "how to behave when cops arrive" lesson in any required training for licensure (dunno if they have mandatory classes or not for civilian permits).
As far as beating cops in competition goes: of COURSE you will beat them. The average officer shoots about 60 rounds annually, and that's if the department requires requals twice in a year. Sadly, especially in a couple of State Agencies I know, *all* there is time to do is run Basic programs and complete a bare minimum of continuing education, due to budget restraints as expressed by labor shortage in training divisions....and statistical analysis of work production. Quantifying public safety is such a wonderful thing (not).
Agree with everything you said. As retired LEO, I interpret the Chief as saying it raises the possibility of shooting licensed civillians. And, I agree, if someone with a gun turns and has it pointed at me, I will shoot first. +1 on training both LE AND civillians on "how to behave when the cops arrive".
Yes, you will beat most LE in competitions. I am happy to let you beat me at shooting pie plates. As long as I know that when someone is shooting at me, I can take cover , control my physiological responses, return fire and eliminate the threat I could care less. Huge difference in shooting when someone is shooting at you.
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2013/01...nearly-33m-in-settlements-of-police-lawsuits/The committeeâs chair, Ald. Edward Burke (14th), touched a nerve when he quoted from an appeals court ruling in the case: âThey might as well have released her into the lionsâ den at Brookfield Zoo.â
periodIt is a really weak argument.