snert
Silver $$ Contributor
That incident was a total fail from GO. Just how a guy in a wig, with a trench coat and a shotty IN HIS PANTS was allowed to enter, let alone go to the front row, sit, stand, and the initial response was to put someone "near him" is an indication that this team practiced REACTION, not intervention. The team leader was one hell of a shot, but they trained to shoot, not to stop a situation before it turned into a problem. It takes a certain kind of person, and a strong sense of confidence (it helps if there is a big insurance policy held on your behalf) and constant realistic scenario training to be willing to walk up to an "itchy" in a crowd, firmly confront (in a Christian manner of course) and be willing to go to ground based on your observation, your training and your ability. That shooter should have never made it past the threshold of that church, and after a firm hello, a warm and smiling stop, and polite demands of going no further he should have been controlled. THAT takes skills.One of the vids that we watched, was of the White Settlement Texas church shooting where the perp pulled a shotgun from beneath a trench coat. One of the security team was within arms reach of the guy, and took three seconds trying to unlimber his handgun before the guy stepped back and unloaded on him..
In this particular case, the good guy probably would have done better (and lived) if he had simply grabbed the guy and hugged him close. There was much help close by, one of which killed the bad guy with a running head shot, but only after he killed two good men. jd
JD, so glad you are getting some training.
By the time the guns come out, in a very real way something has already been lost. Now, don't interpret what I just said as some wimpy whiny lefty pie in sky anti-gun utterance. What I am saying is it is very hard to intervene based on a gut...cause if you are wrong you get sued, looked at like a crazy paranoid, a racist, a homophobe or a warmonger. But it is in protecting (think secret service) that the real hard stuff and decison making happens. Physical control techniques, restraints (cuffs?) OC spray and the willingness to win, right now, not in some extended "rassling" match are a must for a church security team.