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Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:22:32 PM EST
[#1]
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But does an active shooter class really prepare police officers to link up with other patrol officers and do a room entry against an armed suspect? Particularly a day or weekend class awhile ago?

I don't think that's the problem, there was some morale or psychological problem or something. I'm probably using the wrong terms but this was more than "those guys are chicken" it was a problem of unit cohesion and morale. Once a recognized leader showed up and lead the charge most of the "stalled" police seemed willing to join in the attack.
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There isnt a need for non-agency training to know the standard for responding to an active shooter is for the officers on scene to engage the suspect.  The lack of action on part of the on scene officers is what has left most of us in the LE community dumbfounded as more of the actual facts about the incident have come out
But does an active shooter class really prepare police officers to link up with other patrol officers and do a room entry against an armed suspect? Particularly a day or weekend class awhile ago?

I don't think that's the problem, there was some morale or psychological problem or something. I'm probably using the wrong terms but this was more than "those guys are chicken" it was a problem of unit cohesion and morale. Once a recognized leader showed up and lead the charge most of the "stalled" police seemed willing to join in the attack.
Fuck all that.  Last night I got a call that basically put me in a really hard spot.  I had to do entry on a building by myself at least fifteen minutes before I knew any help was on the way.  I got the occupants of the building evacuated, assessed the problem, and was able to relay good intel to the rest of the response.  My supervisor knew I was going and concurred with the decision.  It turned out really well and I'm thankful for that but I do have to tell you that the moments leading up to going inside were full of "What in the fuck do you think you're doing here?" questions in my head.  But I did it.  The good news is the adrenaline dump didn't hit until later when I had to call my wife to tell her I was OK, which is department policy when we are done engaging in monumentally stupid shit.  

A couple of lessons learned...
1) Door chocks are essential because it clearly marks where you entered and keeps the door open for everyone else.
2) Communication is chaotic at best.  We had folks stepping all over everyone else on the radio.  They finally called for silence until I checked in.
3) You can put together a damn good ad hoc respose to something as long as egos stay back at the station.  
4) If you think you need three or four guys, ask for seven or eight.  Many hands make light work.
5) Roles change.  The kind of guy who is first at the scene may very well not be the guy you need doing the entire response.  Know when to lead and when to be led.  

But then again I'm just an old fat guy in a podunk department.  

They had the shooter's full attention while he was shooting at them in Uvalde.  When they chickened out and pulled back down the hall they let innocents die.  That is just inexcusable.  All those guys dressed up for the dance.  But those rifles, vests, helmets, and shields were all just costumes.  Hell, the guy with the shield went down the hall behind three or four officers.  I'll give the guy texting a pass because he could have been using it to communicate.  But hitting the hand sanitizer?  That shows the mind set right there.  There were tons of onlookers, gore gawkers, and self-appointed supervisors there.  But some times you just have to go all in and do your best Leroy Jenkins.  


Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:23:28 PM EST
[#2]
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Yeah within THREE minutes of coming into that hallway where nothing was happening he got two helpers and went in. Were the guys in all green, head to toe - is that DPS? Sherrif? Or were they BorTac too?
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Trucker hat BORTAC guy arrives at 12:47:02 on the counter. Luckily he slips in behind stethoscope hall-monitor guy when his back was turned, and is able to work his way up to the front. He spends about 2 min talking to other Border Patrol guys and getting situated with what's going on. At 12:49:20 he decides it's Fo-Time and makes his move to the door. They make entry at 12:50:01



BORTAC Agent arrived to a scene that was chaotic and mired in inaction.  He quickly realized this was an active shooter and " We have to go in there".

The info I have is that he linked up with another BORTAC Agent and asked if anyone else would go with them. He got two more officers/agents from a non USBP law enforcement agency and made the entry. You can see in the video, that they immediately took fire at the threshold, and the 2 other agency guys bail out of the room, leaving two BORTAC Agents to do the work. Incredible work, and my utmost respect for them.

Also, the classroom door was unlocked the whole time, no key was needed.


Yeah within THREE minutes of coming into that hallway where nothing was happening he got two helpers and went in. Were the guys in all green, head to toe - is that DPS? Sherrif? Or were they BorTac too?



Good question. No one is identified in the hallway.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:24:37 PM EST
[#3]
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I'm not going to speak to the intent of Wes' post. I work for the largest agency in the state. Almost 30 years. Most of the guys I work with would have ignored any stand down bullshit we heard. We are old school and react and make decisions. What I can tell you, even in my own agency, this type of officer is being weeded out/discouraged/not hired. They want supervisors to make every decision. If there isn't one they will wait around until one arrives. I have seen it for several years and it only gets worse. You can have an active shooter class and tell officers they have to act, but if every other single police action they take they have the de-escalation shit being crammed down their throats this is what happens.

Personally I would have been through the door shooting but I am a dinosaur. We are being pushed out of the profession by constant bullshit and I fear what will be left. Society will not function without us, but the shit they are feeding us is setting terrible precedent. I just heard my agency is looking for officers to be on a committee to discuss fingernail polish standards. I shit you not.
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Good insight.  

As to the bolded part, I disagree.  Society would get pretty rough around the edges with vigilante/frontier justice for a good while, while a lot of predators were weeded out by those willing to protect themselves, their families, and their communities; a lot of innocent and helpless people would also be victimized. But just like when this country was settled, civilized people would once again eventually want some form of police force to perform security, while those citizens got on with their own professions.

At that time, we could start over with 'Dinosaurs' like yourself, who come from a different mindset and time when 'Protect and Serve' actually meant that, vs. what a large portion of LE is currently engaged in.

You sound like one of the good guys.  I hate that you will likely get lumped in with the shitstains in your profession, but honestly that should be a motivator for y'all to expose and correct the course you described.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:25:49 PM EST
[#4]
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You know what sucks? Someone like that, I bet they feel horrible that they weren’t able to get in that classroom sooner. I bet he has a lot of guilt with that, because good people always wish they’d have done more, which is why they’re good people in the first place.

Meanwhile the fucks that fingerfucked each others’ assholes in the hallway for 77 minutes probably don’t miss a wink of sleep over it.
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Trucker hat BORTAC guy arrives at 12:47:02 on the counter. Luckily he slips in behind stethoscope hall-monitor guy when his back was turned, and is able to work his way up to the front. He spends about 2 min talking to other Boarder Patrol guys and getting situated with what's going on. At 12:49:20 he decides it's Fo-Time and makes his move to the door. They make entry at 12:50:01


Dude really is a hero.

In the main thread, I asked if there was any info whether the breach was initiated within minutes of BORTAC guy's arrival, with him showing up, being apprised of the situation and immediately organizing the breach. Looks like that's exactly what happened.

Hats off to him. In the main thread, it was also mentioned (by someone who's worked with them?) that active BORTAC agents generally don't reveal their IDs. This guy obviously DGAF about the publicity of being hailed a 'hero'. "Just did what needed to be done" type.

This guy deserves a $XXX,XXX .gov commission to tour DPSs around the country conducting AS training and seminars on mindset.


You know what sucks? Someone like that, I bet they feel horrible that they weren’t able to get in that classroom sooner. I bet he has a lot of guilt with that, because good people always wish they’d have done more, which is why they’re good people in the first place.

Meanwhile the fucks that fingerfucked each others’ assholes in the hallway for 77 minutes probably don’t miss a wink of sleep over it.

No doubt. The grim expression on his face in the now famous pic, pretty much says it all.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:26:04 PM EST
[#5]
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I still believe a list should be released to the public of every cop who was on scene, where they were posted up and how many minutes they were there before the asshole was shot.
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Agreed.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:28:10 PM EST
[#6]
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Unless they’re in a union.

How many police departments are unionized?
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Not near as many as GD thinks
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:28:18 PM EST
[#7]
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BORTAC guy shows up and ~3 minutes later shooter is terminated. He wasn’t having any of the cowardice bullshit.
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He had one other BorTac agent and 2 from other agencies? All four of them should be commended. The two that fell down while rifle rounds were being sprayed stepped up to get sprayed. God bless BorTac trucker hat jeans dude.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:28:38 PM EST
[#8]
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...

* The lack of rifle-rated armor, and familiarity with such, is a huge psychological hole in a situation like this. The shields in the hallway appear to be IIIA shields, which is to say, almost completely pointless to be there at all. If guys have shields they know can stop incoming rounds, they're way more willing to move into position to take those rounds. The majority of agencies do not issue shields to patrol officers (and offhand I've yet to find a single agency that issues rifle-rated shields to everyone, although ours is in the process of doing so).
...
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What a load of crap. I am a civilian nobody,  and yet I still manage to have MULTIPLE plate sets, including one with sides. If I can do it on a nothing budget,  they sure as hell can.  

If money is an issue, maybe these agencies can stop playing military,  blowing thousands on MRAPs and APCs, and buy gear AND training that these cowards would  actually use..
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:29:40 PM EST
[#9]
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You going to post a link in your other thread?
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@texashomeserver

Are you reading your own thread?


Yep.
You going to post a link in your other thread?


Nope.

But, at least now we know that the video floated by The Statesman was heavily redacted of audio. Perhaps that was done because someone decided this would be for the Uvalde parents,
and this was the copy made for them.
Perhaps it is just another level of coverup by either the locals or DPS.

Without full audio we are still being lied to. The full audio is something I won't link.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:30:35 PM EST
[#10]
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Totally!  However, the cop who was held back (his daughter sadly did not make it), spouted that he wants  'gun controls' in their memorial march.
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You would think that after the population sees this video it would reinforce in the minds of the people of their need to CCW and
the importance of the 2 Amendment.
You would think that people would wake up to the fact that you have to be ready to defend yourself and family and not
completely depend on the police to come to your rescue when time is of the essence.
It is so heartbreaking and angering to watch the video knowing that little children are being slaughtered while police standby and do nothing.

Totally!  However, the cop who was held back (his daughter sadly did not make it), spouted that he wants  'gun controls' in their memorial march.


I do so feel for the the cop that lost his daughter.  I hope as he works his way through the grief that at some point he will change his thinking about more gun control like gun free zones and teachers not being able to arm themselves just to mention a couple.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:31:35 PM EST
[#11]
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It would be an Interesting exercise to go back to the original threads and call out all the leg humpers who said shit like “you wouldn’t have done any better”, “the kids were already dead”, “ they tried to get in and were locked out”, “they weren’t equipped to breach”.


Their were A LOT of those posters. Some really popular ones too.

Too bad ARF doesn’t like holding those types accountable.
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We don’t know what it’s like in the arena.  
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:33:08 PM EST
[#12]
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You're getting shit on because you've done nothing but defend these cowards and make excuses for them in every thread.

In the first couple days, I could understand the excuses and desire for there to be some reason 19 cops stacked up in a hallway for an hour while kids died.  I'm not a cop and even I thought it looked horrible but surely there had to be more to the story.  I really didn't want to believe that 19 cops would stack up in a hallway and listen to kids scream for an hour.

- "You can't just breach a door like that".....the door wasn't even locked
- "They didn't have long guns".....turns out they did
- "They needed shields".....they had them
- "Their shields weren't rifle rated".....don't fucking care
- "They might not have known where the bad guy was".....yes they did
- "The shooting was probably over".....no it wasn't and you could hear kids screaming

Now you've transitioned to it's not the 19 cops fault, they had shitty leadership or lacked tactical leadership....etc...etc...etc.

If the cops in the hallway put as much effort into killing the bad guy as they did handcuffing parents outside, this would have been over pretty quick.
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Aimless sees the light!

I've been getting shit on and ignored endlessly in these threads for suggesting there *might* be a lesson here other than "19 random cowards showed up all in one place and failed". Because you're literally describing exactly what I've been pointing out: tactical leadership, and the lack thereof.

What GD really doesn't want to think about is that leadership is vanishingly rare in almost all walks of life. How many major companies are run by raving morons? How many flag officers *aren't* self-serving ass-kissing politicos? How many people drive by a car crash and don't stop?

The majority of people aren't leaders, they're followers. That's true in the military, in law enforcement, in a large company or on a small jobsite. It's true in GD as well, because GD is made up of an assortment of humans, with a self-selected bias towards interest in gun ownership. That's a truth that the average person here doesn't want to hear or confront. It's preferable to imagine superiority, to scoff at anyone who would suggest that they might fall into the same trap. "Those cops had all that equipment and training and failed", they say, "I don't have any of that and I know I would have done better! They must *all* have been cowards and suck!" Anyone who suggests otherwise is challenging that deeply-held self-image of reliance and strength...and thus the pushback.

Now, where do we go to get tactical leaders?

You're getting shit on because you've done nothing but defend these cowards and make excuses for them in every thread.

In the first couple days, I could understand the excuses and desire for there to be some reason 19 cops stacked up in a hallway for an hour while kids died.  I'm not a cop and even I thought it looked horrible but surely there had to be more to the story.  I really didn't want to believe that 19 cops would stack up in a hallway and listen to kids scream for an hour.

- "You can't just breach a door like that".....the door wasn't even locked
- "They didn't have long guns".....turns out they did
- "They needed shields".....they had them
- "Their shields weren't rifle rated".....don't fucking care
- "They might not have known where the bad guy was".....yes they did
- "The shooting was probably over".....no it wasn't and you could hear kids screaming

Now you've transitioned to it's not the 19 cops fault, they had shitty leadership or lacked tactical leadership....etc...etc...etc.

If the cops in the hallway put as much effort into killing the bad guy as they did handcuffing parents outside, this would have been over pretty quick.




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Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:35:43 PM EST
[#13]
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What a load of crap. I am a civilian nobody,  and yet I still manage to have MULTIPLE plate sets, including one with sides. If I can do it on a nothing budget,  they sure as hell can.  

If money is an issue, maybe these agencies can stop playing military,  blowing thousands on MRAPs and APCs, and buy gear AND training that these cowards would  actually use..
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...

* The lack of rifle-rated armor, and familiarity with such, is a huge psychological hole in a situation like this. The shields in the hallway appear to be IIIA shields, which is to say, almost completely pointless to be there at all. If guys have shields they know can stop incoming rounds, they're way more willing to move into position to take those rounds. The majority of agencies do not issue shields to patrol officers (and offhand I've yet to find a single agency that issues rifle-rated shields to everyone, although ours is in the process of doing so).
...


What a load of crap. I am a civilian nobody,  and yet I still manage to have MULTIPLE plate sets, including one with sides. If I can do it on a nothing budget,  they sure as hell can.  

If money is an issue, maybe these agencies can stop playing military,  blowing thousands on MRAPs and APCs, and buy gear AND training that these cowards would  actually use..


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Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:36:26 PM EST
[#14]
unreal

they stood there at the end of the hallway while that guy killed kids.

they just stood there in case he came out of the room.they could shoot down the hallway.

I have no words
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:38:05 PM EST
[#15]
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He's the one that got grazed on the head, right? Maybe he came through the door on the opposite end of that hallway?
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Fuck be upon those first two with AR's that turned and ran back down the corridor like a couple of babies.  The perp could've shot them in the back, they weren't even retreating facing the threat.

Also cop on the right in tears being held back by a couple of others.

Hand sanitizer, phone in hand.

Didn't see the BORTAC guy that first came out as having taken the perp out - short sleeve white/blue collar shirt, truckers cap.

(ETA: I watched the shorter version Chokey linked to)

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FTy2eNXXEAEtPB9?format=png&name=small


He's the one that got grazed on the head, right? Maybe he came through the door on the opposite end of that hallway?



Nevermind; saw that he entered 12:47 and got past hall monitor guy; entered class room like 2 minutes later
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:38:32 PM EST
[#16]
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No doubt. The grim expression on his face in the now famous pic, pretty much says it all.
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BORTAC guy...Whoever you are, thank you for doing what needed to be done. I wish I could buy you a drink and shake your hand  

I wont risk my account talking about the rest of those worthless sons of bitches. I hope there's a deep corner of Hell for them to spend eternity. Cowards. Yellow bellied COWARDS.

Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:39:23 PM EST
[#17]
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unreal

they stood there at the end of the hallway while that guy killed kids.

they just stood there in case he came out of the room.they could shoot down the hallway.

I have no words
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The punisher screen saver is fucking epic.

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Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:45:26 PM EST
[#18]
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unreal

they stood there at the end of the hallway while that guy killed kids.

they just stood there in case he came out of the room.they could shoot down the hallway.

I have no words



The punisher screen saver is fucking epic.

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/463094/2DC5B435-793B-483D-BDFC-B01B7B1BBF66_jpe-2451380.JPG

We sure he’s not Bumpo from The Punisher movie?

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Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:45:59 PM EST
[#19]
who dogged down the door to let him in
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:46:21 PM EST
[#20]
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Nope.

But, at least now we know that the video floated by The Statesman was heavily redacted of audio. Perhaps that was done because someone decided this would be for the Uvalde parents,
and this was the copy made for them.
Perhaps it is just another level of coverup by either the locals or DPS.

Without full audio we are still being lied to. The full audio is something I won't link.
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@texashomeserver

Is this new video you are referring to the same one posted on page 2?  It is one hour 22 minutes and contains audio.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:49:03 PM EST
[#21]
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unreal

they stood there at the end of the hallway while that guy killed kids.

they just stood there in case he came out of the room.they could shoot down the hallway.

I have no words



The punisher screen saver is fucking epic.

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/463094/2DC5B435-793B-483D-BDFC-B01B7B1BBF66_jpe-2451380.JPG

We sure he’s not Bumpo from The Punisher movie?

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/483179/66594400-8EEC-4BEF-9F1D-9BCD924ECB93_jpe-2451383.JPG







Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:50:16 PM EST
[#22]
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Nope.

But, at least now we know that the video floated by The Statesman was heavily redacted of audio. Perhaps that was done because someone decided this would be for the Uvalde parents,
and this was the copy made for them.
Perhaps it is just another level of coverup by either the locals or DPS.

Without full audio we are still being lied to. The full audio is something I won't link.
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@texashomeserver

Are you reading your own thread?


Yep.
You going to post a link in your other thread?


Nope.

But, at least now we know that the video floated by The Statesman was heavily redacted of audio. Perhaps that was done because someone decided this would be for the Uvalde parents,
and this was the copy made for them.
Perhaps it is just another level of coverup by either the locals or DPS.

Without full audio we are still being lied to. The full audio is something I won't link.

@texashomeserver

If you're not going to post/link the video with the unedited audio, just answer ONE question:

What is the latest actual timestamp that has audible children's cries heard? I think we'd all like to know if the rooms were mostly silent after the officers showed up at ~11:37, or if they literally stood around continuing to do nothing even as they heard children continuing to scream/cry out.

It would definitely underline Arredondo's claim that he transitioned to a barricaded suspect because "they were all dead".
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:50:47 PM EST
[#23]
What a bunch of worthless cock suckers. I hope they suck start a 12 gauge
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:51:21 PM EST
[#24]
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@texashomeserver

Is this new video you are referring to the same one posted on page 2?  It is one hour 22 minutes and contains audio.
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Nope.

But, at least now we know that the video floated by The Statesman was heavily redacted of audio. Perhaps that was done because someone decided this would be for the Uvalde parents,
and this was the copy made for them.
Perhaps it is just another level of coverup by either the locals or DPS.

Without full audio we are still being lied to. The full audio is something I won't link.

@texashomeserver

Is this new video you are referring to the same one posted on page 2?  It is one hour 22 minutes and contains audio.


Yes, and no. That video was let out by The Statesman with scrubbed audio. Some, as in the horrible part, were and are edited out.
There was no disclaimer from The Statesman or KVUE stating this.
The full audio changes the the whole video. We were not told of what was actually in the background being heard by the officers in the hallway.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:52:42 PM EST
[#25]
I see everyone praising the BORTAC guy, but how does anyone know what he did? I followed him in the video and it looked like he covered the door from across the hall but I don't see him breaching. They were talking about going in before he showed up in the video.

Not disputing it, just wondering if there's a link or something that explains why he was the hero out of the rest of these cowards.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:53:35 PM EST
[#26]
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who dogged down the door to let him in
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Apparently, ALL the exterior doors (as well as the classroom doors to 111 and 112) were unlocked. The responding LE had no issues entering through multiple exterior doors, but apparently no one had the balls to even try the doorhandles to the classrooms.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:53:50 PM EST
[#27]
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If I was a parent of one of those kids I'd be watching that movie and taking notes.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:54:29 PM EST
[#28]
This was posted by another member in the other thread -

It was posted on VK.

Horrible doesn't describe it.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:55:52 PM EST
[#29]
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Yes, and no. That video was let out by The Statesman with scrubbed audio. Some, as in the horrible part, were and are edited out.
There was no disclaimer from The Statesman or KVUE stating this.
The full audio changes the the whole video. We were not told of what was actually in the background being heard by the officers in the hallway.
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Pretty much what I was wondering. There is no gunfire without screams in this event.  Until they are all dead at least.  They are bastards.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:58:05 PM EST
[#30]
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If I was a parent of one of those kids I'd be watching that movie and taking notes.
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If I was a parent of one of those kids I'd be watching that movie and taking notes.



Ayup.  

And the fucking mayor called the media ‘chickens’ for releasing the footage of the low iq cowards  In a just world all of them would be drawn and quartered.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 2:58:41 PM EST
[#31]
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Yeah. Not gonna watch that
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There's nothing graphic.  

Just a bunch of cops standing around doing nothing.

Okay, maybe it will make you sick.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:00:26 PM EST
[#32]
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There's nothing graphic.  

Just a bunch of cops standing around doing nothing.

Okay, maybe it will make you sick.
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Yeah. Not gonna watch that
There's nothing graphic.  

Just a bunch of cops standing around doing nothing.

Okay, maybe it will make you sick.


Not going to watch it…
Apparently there were several instances of gun fire coming from the classroom during the time they were checking their punisher phones and washing down with antibacterial in the hallway.

Just the thought of that alone is enraging.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:02:17 PM EST
[#33]
Holy shit, I’d rather be rescued from terrorists by Russian Special Forces. I’d have a better chance.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:03:11 PM EST
[#34]
Well they had a Halligan bar at 12:35:47, but no evidence they actually tried using it.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:05:37 PM EST
[#35]
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I do so feel for the the cop that lost his daughter.  I hope as he works his way through the grief that at some point he will change his thinking about more gun control like gun free zones and teachers not being able to arm themselves just to mention a couple.
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Question.  Wasn't that cop hanging out in the hallway as well?
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:07:10 PM EST
[#36]
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So for those who don't want to watch, here's the summary:

11:33.02 gunman enters school
11:33.27 gunman enters classroom
11:35.57 at least 6 cops, at least 2 of which have rifles, enter the school and make their way in
11:36.09 at least 8 cops are in the hallway, maybe 4 are now "stacked" outside the classroom, including at least two rifles
11:36.17 at least 9 cops are in the hallway, at least 6 "stacked" outside the classroom
11:36.58 shots are fired and all the "stacked" cops scramble away
11:37+ nothing happens (except victims dying) for a very long time...

So thoughts are:

Mistake 1: if there are already 6 people coming in at 11:35.57, I'm sure there were at least 1-2 that could have entered the school even earlier during the initial 100 round shooting spree... why did they wait outside and not enter the school?

Mistake 2: You've got a 4 man stack for two classrooms at 11:36.09. At least two of them have rifles. Why aren't you going in????

Mistake 3: Only 8 seconds later you've now got 6 people stacked at the doors; WHY ARE YOU STILL SITTING WAITING OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOMS?

There's nothing beyond this really worth commenting. The rest of the time is just kids bleeding out for the next hour+
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So for those who don't want to watch, here's the summary:

11:33.02 gunman enters school
11:33.27 gunman enters classroom
11:35.57 at least 6 cops, at least 2 of which have rifles, enter the school and make their way in
11:36.09 at least 8 cops are in the hallway, maybe 4 are now "stacked" outside the classroom, including at least two rifles
11:36.17 at least 9 cops are in the hallway, at least 6 "stacked" outside the classroom
11:36.58 shots are fired and all the "stacked" cops scramble away
11:37+ nothing happens (except victims dying) for a very long time...

So thoughts are:

Mistake 1: if there are already 6 people coming in at 11:35.57, I'm sure there were at least 1-2 that could have entered the school even earlier during the initial 100 round shooting spree... why did they wait outside and not enter the school?

Mistake 2: You've got a 4 man stack for two classrooms at 11:36.09. At least two of them have rifles. Why aren't you going in????

Mistake 3: Only 8 seconds later you've now got 6 people stacked at the doors; WHY ARE YOU STILL SITTING WAITING OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOMS?

There's nothing beyond this really worth commenting. The rest of the time is just kids bleeding out for the next hour+
As to your point #1, something I've been thinking about is the statement from the ALERRT report's Tactical Assessment section:

Third, a Uvalde PD officer reported that he was at the crash site and observed the suspect carryinga rifle prior to the suspect entering the west hall exterior door. The UPD officer was armed with a
rifle and sighted in to shoot the attacker; however, he asked his supervisor for permission to shoot.
The UPD officer did not hear a response and turned to get confirmation from his supervisor. When
he turned back to address the suspect, the suspect had already entered the west hall exterior door
at 11:33:00.
...
Furthermore, the UPD officer was approximately 148 yards from the west hall exterior door.



Police were not seen entering the building until 11:35:55. So what were they doing for 3 minutes? It doesn't take 3 minutes to cover 148 yards unless you're not in a hurry.

I'm guessing they waited to go in as a group because within 5 seconds there were 7 officers in the building


Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:08:45 PM EST
[#37]
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At last, an actual response that addresses the salient point!

Let's say we do it. How extreme does it need to be? Are we talking motivation by fear, or by shame? If fear, nothing less than public execution could be considered, I'd say. So let's hang every LEO there high, and let them rot for a week.

What occurs next?

The entire profession, nationwide, is already teetering on the edge of collapse. Realistically almost every city with a population of 6 digits or more has been running on emergency staffing for months or years by now. How many more will quit? How many will decline to apply to replace the quit officers? Any machine has a limit to how far it can redline before it falls apart, and what you're suggesting has a very good chance of causing exactly that across large portions of the country. The resulting death toll is guaranteed to be far higher than any school shooting in history. Is it still worth doing?

And the better question yet might be, how well do you expect that threat to really work? The Soviets had to place armed commissars behind the front lines to herd them forward at gunpoint, despite an overwhelming awareness amongst the Red Army that any failure at all would result in execution. I would submit to you that no threat of capital punishment at a distant time in the future is going to outweigh the immediacy of incoming gunfire, particularly in a voluntary profession.

While I thank you for addressing my point, I fail to see how it presents a viable solution for anything going forward. And as far as I'm concerned, everyone here who is blindly rageposting and not providing coherent arguments is fully worthy of being ignored or scorned, because it's precisely that unwillingness to confront hard truths that allows Uvaldes and Parklands to happen.
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Everything you say is from the heart. And well and fine and true. And yet none of it makes a damn bit of difference in answering one simple question:

How do you prevent the next Uvalde?

Publicly punish the cowards who displayed depraved indifference and allowed people to die by stopping those who wanted to actually stop the shooter.

I'm also okay with perpetually shaming people that defend their cowardly behavior.


At last, an actual response that addresses the salient point!

Let's say we do it. How extreme does it need to be? Are we talking motivation by fear, or by shame? If fear, nothing less than public execution could be considered, I'd say. So let's hang every LEO there high, and let them rot for a week.

What occurs next?

The entire profession, nationwide, is already teetering on the edge of collapse. Realistically almost every city with a population of 6 digits or more has been running on emergency staffing for months or years by now. How many more will quit? How many will decline to apply to replace the quit officers? Any machine has a limit to how far it can redline before it falls apart, and what you're suggesting has a very good chance of causing exactly that across large portions of the country. The resulting death toll is guaranteed to be far higher than any school shooting in history. Is it still worth doing?

And the better question yet might be, how well do you expect that threat to really work? The Soviets had to place armed commissars behind the front lines to herd them forward at gunpoint, despite an overwhelming awareness amongst the Red Army that any failure at all would result in execution. I would submit to you that no threat of capital punishment at a distant time in the future is going to outweigh the immediacy of incoming gunfire, particularly in a voluntary profession.

While I thank you for addressing my point, I fail to see how it presents a viable solution for anything going forward. And as far as I'm concerned, everyone here who is blindly rageposting and not providing coherent arguments is fully worthy of being ignored or scorned, because it's precisely that unwillingness to confront hard truths that allows Uvaldes and Parklands to happen.


Who cares how many quit. Those are the ones that know they are in the wrong line of work. If a guy gets a job as an auto mechanic and knows absolutely nothing about fixing cars, should he continue being an auto mechanic?  These guys didn’t have the intestinal fortitude to save lives and kill a bad guy. In my mind they don’t need to be cops. Seems simple to me.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:11:39 PM EST
[#38]
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You have to be the first person I've ever heard in my life claim that HR personnel go out and "train" on their own time and dime.

Seriously, not a single person I know who works in any of those professions engages in self-paid training assignments. Doctors with their own practices, going to a conference? Sure, I know some who do, once or twice a year (and make it an office junket as a business expense write-off). And many who don't. Construction guys going out on their weekend to another job site to go learn new techniques from a different crew? I'm sure someone, somewhere has done so sometime in the past, but you're outright delusional if you think the majority of people make it a point to go on their off time and and spend their own money training for their jobs.

I'll say it again: you're delusional if you think the majority of people in *any* profession are out spending their off time and their personal money signing up for training classes on their own. There are a few, here and there, but they are the exact same type of outliers as the BORTAC guysI. Teachers. Nurses. Truck drivers. Tile-setters. A/C repairmen. Firefighters. Bankers. Line cooks. In any of those fields, you *might* find 5% of workers who have gone out and taken a class on their own in the past year or two. Maybe.



You're not wrong, but you're still missing the fundamental reason for the *why*.

The point that I made, that no one likes, is that the character you describe is vanishingly rare. The character to run into incoming rifle fire without hesitation. Where do you propose to find those people like your friend, in sufficient quantities to cover every town in the country? Agencies don't get to raise kids from birth to have good character, they get to hire the few who show up anymore and are crazy enough to put a uniform on and get in a car. Where do agencies get better people from?

No one here has yet to respond as to how they suggest you fill agencies with only the right characters. I keep saying it, and everyone just insults me, makes a TBL comment, or COCs themselves, but. Not. One. Poster. Has been able to explain how you hire sufficient numbers of officers who are Heraclitus's 1 in 100 warrior. One poster just says we should eliminate all law enforcement. I'm quite certain he won't find the resulting society afterwards any better, but at this point no one wants to confront the actual tough questions of human nature.

Real lessons?

* Average officers, confronted with a barricade and incoming gunfire, and a confusing tactical situation, tend to lose momentum and not know what to do.

* If leadership doesn't immediately appear and form a plan, everyone reverts to the lowest level of training: try to find cover and point a muzzle at a potential threat. Leadership can be anyone of any rank, who is willing and able to direct others around them, and be followed. There was at least one supervisor on scene at the beginning. He never appears to take any leadership role. This is the downside of promoting people into supervisory roles on seniority/lack of alternatives/favoritism/anything other than actual leadership talent.

* When multiple agencies arrive on scene, if an effective leader isn't there making plans, everyone loses momentum because they think the other agency has the ball. People tend to think problems are getting solved by others, and revert to waiting for those others to solve the problem.

* When minutes count, SWAT is hours away. Mindset in many places is "wait for SWAT, they'll save us!" That mindset breeds paralysis. Paralysis is death. Everyone in that hallway was told that at some point in their careers, probably hundreds of times, but it's still incredibly hard to overcome when directly experienced.

* We can't know, but I suspect strongly that if you grabbed some of the individual officers and threw them into the same situation, without backup of any kind, at least a couple of them would have moved forward on their own. The more people who show up on scene, the greater the momentum becomes to stand by and wait. I've seen it in my own experiences, from guys who literally ran right into gunfights and kicked ass, but when other situations got too big with too much brass, froze up and lost all initiative.

* The lack of rifle-rated armor, and familiarity with such, is a huge psychological hole in a situation like this. The shields in the hallway appear to be IIIA shields, which is to say, almost completely pointless to be there at all. If guys have shields they know can stop incoming rounds, they're way more willing to move into position to take those rounds. The majority of agencies do not issue shields to patrol officers (and offhand I've yet to find a single agency that issues rifle-rated shields to everyone, although ours is in the process of doing so).

* Throwing so many officers into that hallway was pointless. Had the shooter come out the doorway, the crossfire would have been disastrous, and likely taken out half the officers in the hall. It shows a complete lack of coordination on scene.

* Possession of a rifle does not make one a warrior. Everyone likes to associate the two together, but this is GD's least favorite truth: the weapon is merely a tool. The mindset to fight and die with it is something else entirely, that doesn't come bundled with any PSA Daily Deal.
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What would you do?


Not stand there with body armor and a rifle and let that shit go down.

This is not a difficult problem to solve. Dangerous, yes, but not difficult. You find the guy doing the killing and you kill him.

...which, thankfully, when someone with a goddamn spine showed up he proceeded to do precisely that.

In Parkland, unarmed JROTC cadets and an unarmed football coach put themselves between the shooter and innocent people in an attempt to save lives. They had no duty to do this. They had sworn no oath, had no body armor, no backup, and no weapons...but they figured out what the right thing to do was even without any training and did whatever they could.

Let's not pretend that this gaggle of shitheads was just insufficiently trained.

I've been involved in training for 20+ years now. Police, in the main, don't fucking train beyond department minimums. And for 20 years I've heard police from all over the place bleat and whine about how training should be provided and they should be paid to do it on department time and not lose any of their own time because reasons. Meanwhile every other profession in the goddamn country involves people investing their own time and their own money in learning or improving skills that are useful in their employment. If someone works in IT, medicine, construction, law, accountancy, or any host of other professional tracks in this country, they spend hours outside of the office learning or honing skills they use on the job. They take time away from their lives and their families to get it done because that's what it takes. Even the fucking useless HR drones do that shit on their own time and their own dime. If you are in a job that doesn't involve asking if you want fries with that, you are going to have to spend your own time and your own money improving your skills just to keep up. That's the reality of the working world.

But cops? No, somehow cops are uniquely exempt from the requirement damn near everyone else in society has to invest in their own capability.


You have to be the first person I've ever heard in my life claim that HR personnel go out and "train" on their own time and dime.

Seriously, not a single person I know who works in any of those professions engages in self-paid training assignments. Doctors with their own practices, going to a conference? Sure, I know some who do, once or twice a year (and make it an office junket as a business expense write-off). And many who don't. Construction guys going out on their weekend to another job site to go learn new techniques from a different crew? I'm sure someone, somewhere has done so sometime in the past, but you're outright delusional if you think the majority of people make it a point to go on their off time and and spend their own money training for their jobs.

I'll say it again: you're delusional if you think the majority of people in *any* profession are out spending their off time and their personal money signing up for training classes on their own. There are a few, here and there, but they are the exact same type of outliers as the BORTAC guysI. Teachers. Nurses. Truck drivers. Tile-setters. A/C repairmen. Firefighters. Bankers. Line cooks. In any of those fields, you *might* find 5% of workers who have gone out and taken a class on their own in the past year or two. Maybe.


You're not wrong that any number of departments in this country would fail just as spectacularly as Uvalde's cowards did. But that's because those departments have a toxic leadership culture full of cowards. Which means they produce a department full of toxic cowards who will fail like this. Partly that's on the voters for not holding that sort of leadership accountable...but whenever he voters do make any attempt then the shitbags wrap themselves in the flag and claim their heroes to avoid any accountability.

...just like the Uvalde cowards have done here.

The bottom line is that policing in the United States is islands of competence, professionalism, and courage under continuous assault by tidal waves of mediocrity and cowardice. But that doesn't excuse the failure of individuals who are swimming in that shit to do better, especially when it's this fucking obvious.

One of the reasons there's so much suck is because so much of it gets wrapped in the flag and excused because CoPz!!! Motherfuckers running around with TBL stickers and TBL catchphrases jerking each other off about brotherhood, heroism, and other stupid lies.

How much brotherhood is involved in holding an officer back while his wife is literally bleeding to death a few feet away? Zilch.

The first step to fixing the problem is acknowledging it.

Lack of training isn't the core problem.

Lack of character is.

A friend of mine has worked two active shooter calls in the last couple of weeks. In each case he was furthest away, but first on the scene. In each case he grabbed a shotgun and went in hard to find the problem. All by himself. He's the only one on his department that has sought out training outside of what his department provides.

His character drove him to be better. Not the other way around.


You're not wrong, but you're still missing the fundamental reason for the *why*.

The point that I made, that no one likes, is that the character you describe is vanishingly rare. The character to run into incoming rifle fire without hesitation. Where do you propose to find those people like your friend, in sufficient quantities to cover every town in the country? Agencies don't get to raise kids from birth to have good character, they get to hire the few who show up anymore and are crazy enough to put a uniform on and get in a car. Where do agencies get better people from?

No one here has yet to respond as to how they suggest you fill agencies with only the right characters. I keep saying it, and everyone just insults me, makes a TBL comment, or COCs themselves, but. Not. One. Poster. Has been able to explain how you hire sufficient numbers of officers who are Heraclitus's 1 in 100 warrior. One poster just says we should eliminate all law enforcement. I'm quite certain he won't find the resulting society afterwards any better, but at this point no one wants to confront the actual tough questions of human nature.

Real lessons?

* Average officers, confronted with a barricade and incoming gunfire, and a confusing tactical situation, tend to lose momentum and not know what to do.

* If leadership doesn't immediately appear and form a plan, everyone reverts to the lowest level of training: try to find cover and point a muzzle at a potential threat. Leadership can be anyone of any rank, who is willing and able to direct others around them, and be followed. There was at least one supervisor on scene at the beginning. He never appears to take any leadership role. This is the downside of promoting people into supervisory roles on seniority/lack of alternatives/favoritism/anything other than actual leadership talent.

* When multiple agencies arrive on scene, if an effective leader isn't there making plans, everyone loses momentum because they think the other agency has the ball. People tend to think problems are getting solved by others, and revert to waiting for those others to solve the problem.

* When minutes count, SWAT is hours away. Mindset in many places is "wait for SWAT, they'll save us!" That mindset breeds paralysis. Paralysis is death. Everyone in that hallway was told that at some point in their careers, probably hundreds of times, but it's still incredibly hard to overcome when directly experienced.

* We can't know, but I suspect strongly that if you grabbed some of the individual officers and threw them into the same situation, without backup of any kind, at least a couple of them would have moved forward on their own. The more people who show up on scene, the greater the momentum becomes to stand by and wait. I've seen it in my own experiences, from guys who literally ran right into gunfights and kicked ass, but when other situations got too big with too much brass, froze up and lost all initiative.

* The lack of rifle-rated armor, and familiarity with such, is a huge psychological hole in a situation like this. The shields in the hallway appear to be IIIA shields, which is to say, almost completely pointless to be there at all. If guys have shields they know can stop incoming rounds, they're way more willing to move into position to take those rounds. The majority of agencies do not issue shields to patrol officers (and offhand I've yet to find a single agency that issues rifle-rated shields to everyone, although ours is in the process of doing so).

* Throwing so many officers into that hallway was pointless. Had the shooter come out the doorway, the crossfire would have been disastrous, and likely taken out half the officers in the hall. It shows a complete lack of coordination on scene.

* Possession of a rifle does not make one a warrior. Everyone likes to associate the two together, but this is GD's least favorite truth: the weapon is merely a tool. The mindset to fight and die with it is something else entirely, that doesn't come bundled with any PSA Daily Deal.


More arm-waving nonsense. They had the training, they had the equipment, they had everything they needed to end the threat. Yet they did not. Cowards all. That is the truth. Your fellow officers in the hallway were cowards and should never hold a badge again. If you support them in any way, shape, or form, neither should you.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:14:02 PM EST
[#39]
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I can't believe I'm saying this but I bet a months pay that 10 Arfcommers would have done 100 times better, then Ulvade LarpPD
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LARPing.


I can't believe I'm saying this but I bet a months pay that 10 Arfcommers would have done 100 times better, then Ulvade LarpPD
Fuck it, I'd trust actual airsoft larpers to do better than this.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:14:18 PM EST
[#40]
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Everything you say is from the heart. And well and fine and true. And yet none of it makes a damn bit of difference in answering one simple question:

How do you prevent the next Uvalde?
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What would you do?

Seriously. You're now in charge of Texas DPS, or whatever Texan agency you want, circle January 2022. What do you do differently? What do you differently that would actually work? What is it in the hiring process you change? The training courses that are offered? The electoral voting of leadership of local agencies?

I've been saying all along that "cowardice" isn't the explanation. It's the answer that everyone wants to hear, because it's easy and satisfies the righteous anger, and dovetails oh so nicely with the ragebait articles, and doesn't need any further analysis or worry. There was a clump of cowards in Texas that day, and let's go imprison/execute them all, and that makes the world a safe place again. Or maybe it's just that all cops are cowards, our tax dollars are wasted, and maybe those anarchists have a point and we should just give it a whirl, no? Texas DPS Director McGraw would like you to believe it was all the fault of a single man (who isn't the shooter, I might add). Is he right?

The answers aren't simple. They aren't a matter of adding a new PowerPoint to the training doctrine. They can't be solved via legislation, or incarceration. Uvalde is just the latest in a long line of human violent conflict that shows that leadership in battle is a rare, precious resource that's impossible to mandate and incapable of artificial creation in a lab. Either it's there at the onset of the gunfight, or it's not.

Honestly the video released yesterday doesn't really show anything new or groundbreaking. The shooter had time to fire over 100 rounds in the classroom before any officers entered the building. We see nothing of the officers outside in this video, though their coordinated entry suggests they staged way too long outside...we don't get to see how, and where.

It's been said over and over again, but the majority of cops are not gunfighters. Their agencies give them a box or two of ammo a year, they aren't shooters, and they don't even know what they don't know. The endless critique of random SROs and patrol cops for not being DEVGRU utterly ignores that the average cop might get 24 hours of training..on a good year...across medical, legal, driving, firearms, ground fighting, computer systems, and equipment usage. To say nothing of the mandatory diversity, equity, and bullshit training. You can't get blood out of a stone. All of this means that when shit hits the fan, it takes some seriously commanding leadership to roll in, make a fast plan, and execute it with guys who aren't trained or equipped for a SWAT-level action. Particularly if they're spread across half a dozen different agencies.

After Parkland, I said at my old agency that we would have done no better on average if it had happened in my AO instead of Parkland. After Parkland, the average patrol guy's view in my area was still "wait for backup, don't go in solo". I went off and wargamed with my SROs how best to ram school gates with my cruiser to come into the fight; most guys didn't even think about what they'd do.

I'll just say this, the capstone of all the things no one here wants to hear: if you grabbed 100 random arfcommers, 90 of them would be the guys hanging at the bottom of the screen by the camera, weapon at the ready but unsure what to do or where to go. 8 or 9 guys would be the meds dude, directing people to the fight or making plans for the wounded. 1 or 2 of those 100 would actually be bumrushing that door and working triggers. That was true in Heraclitus's day back in good ol' 500 BC, and is still true today. Period.


Just ... wow ...

I don't recall the major event after Parkland (whatever was less than 25 yrs ago) but I do recall almost taking a perma-ban for an un-tempered response so will do better this time.

The ONLY goal in this situation is to give evil a different target than helpless children.

When kids are dying, I'll take a mall cop 3min into it vs. DEVGRU who happens to be training 30min away.

There is no 'good plan' when evil does sht like this. None. So either nut up and go stand in front of it or get out of the fkin way so better men than you can do it.

What to do differently? Give evil a different target so it stops killing helpless children.

Whay is the training? Give evil a different target so it stops killing helpless children.

What is the SOP? Give evil a different target so it stops killing helpless children.

What are TTPs? Give evil a different target so it stops killing helpless children.

What do we expect of all men? Give evil a different target so it stops killing helpless children.

What do we pay cops to do if necessary? Give evil a different target so it stops killing helpless children.

What should everyone old, young, rich, poor, straight, gay, jew, gentile expect of every other American Citizen? Give evil a different target so it stops killing helpless children. And if you are unwilling or unable to do this then get the fk out of the way for anyone who will/can.

Anyone who reads this and doesn't understand it is neither my countryman nor welcome here.


Everything you say is from the heart. And well and fine and true. And yet none of it makes a damn bit of difference in answering one simple question:

How do you prevent the next Uvalde?


You prevent it by holding cowardice accountable. You prevent it by charging the officers with a crime. You prevent it by revoking their LEO credentials. You prevent it by using their cowardice as a training video in every AS training course in the country. You prevent it by doing what departments have already done years ago, training to take the fight to the killer.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:14:30 PM EST
[#41]
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Question.  Wasn't that cop hanging out in the hallway as well?
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I do so feel for the the cop that lost his daughter.  I hope as he works his way through the grief that at some point he will change his thinking about more gun control like gun free zones and teachers not being able to arm themselves just to mention a couple.


Question.  Wasn't that cop hanging out in the hallway as well?


Maybe, but I think he was photographed outside at some point so do not know if he actually entered or not.
Anyone else know?
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:14:36 PM EST
[#42]
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More arm-waving nonsense. They had the training, they had the equipment, they had everything they needed to end the threat. Yet they did not. Cowards all. That is the truth. Your fellow officers in the hallway were cowards and should never hold a badge again. If you support them in any way, shape, or form, neither should you.
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What would you do?


Not stand there with body armor and a rifle and let that shit go down.

This is not a difficult problem to solve. Dangerous, yes, but not difficult. You find the guy doing the killing and you kill him.

...which, thankfully, when someone with a goddamn spine showed up he proceeded to do precisely that.

In Parkland, unarmed JROTC cadets and an unarmed football coach put themselves between the shooter and innocent people in an attempt to save lives. They had no duty to do this. They had sworn no oath, had no body armor, no backup, and no weapons...but they figured out what the right thing to do was even without any training and did whatever they could.

Let's not pretend that this gaggle of shitheads was just insufficiently trained.

I've been involved in training for 20+ years now. Police, in the main, don't fucking train beyond department minimums. And for 20 years I've heard police from all over the place bleat and whine about how training should be provided and they should be paid to do it on department time and not lose any of their own time because reasons. Meanwhile every other profession in the goddamn country involves people investing their own time and their own money in learning or improving skills that are useful in their employment. If someone works in IT, medicine, construction, law, accountancy, or any host of other professional tracks in this country, they spend hours outside of the office learning or honing skills they use on the job. They take time away from their lives and their families to get it done because that's what it takes. Even the fucking useless HR drones do that shit on their own time and their own dime. If you are in a job that doesn't involve asking if you want fries with that, you are going to have to spend your own time and your own money improving your skills just to keep up. That's the reality of the working world.

But cops? No, somehow cops are uniquely exempt from the requirement damn near everyone else in society has to invest in their own capability.


You have to be the first person I've ever heard in my life claim that HR personnel go out and "train" on their own time and dime.

Seriously, not a single person I know who works in any of those professions engages in self-paid training assignments. Doctors with their own practices, going to a conference? Sure, I know some who do, once or twice a year (and make it an office junket as a business expense write-off). And many who don't. Construction guys going out on their weekend to another job site to go learn new techniques from a different crew? I'm sure someone, somewhere has done so sometime in the past, but you're outright delusional if you think the majority of people make it a point to go on their off time and and spend their own money training for their jobs.

I'll say it again: you're delusional if you think the majority of people in *any* profession are out spending their off time and their personal money signing up for training classes on their own. There are a few, here and there, but they are the exact same type of outliers as the BORTAC guysI. Teachers. Nurses. Truck drivers. Tile-setters. A/C repairmen. Firefighters. Bankers. Line cooks. In any of those fields, you *might* find 5% of workers who have gone out and taken a class on their own in the past year or two. Maybe.


You're not wrong that any number of departments in this country would fail just as spectacularly as Uvalde's cowards did. But that's because those departments have a toxic leadership culture full of cowards. Which means they produce a department full of toxic cowards who will fail like this. Partly that's on the voters for not holding that sort of leadership accountable...but whenever he voters do make any attempt then the shitbags wrap themselves in the flag and claim their heroes to avoid any accountability.

...just like the Uvalde cowards have done here.

The bottom line is that policing in the United States is islands of competence, professionalism, and courage under continuous assault by tidal waves of mediocrity and cowardice. But that doesn't excuse the failure of individuals who are swimming in that shit to do better, especially when it's this fucking obvious.

One of the reasons there's so much suck is because so much of it gets wrapped in the flag and excused because CoPz!!! Motherfuckers running around with TBL stickers and TBL catchphrases jerking each other off about brotherhood, heroism, and other stupid lies.

How much brotherhood is involved in holding an officer back while his wife is literally bleeding to death a few feet away? Zilch.

The first step to fixing the problem is acknowledging it.

Lack of training isn't the core problem.

Lack of character is.

A friend of mine has worked two active shooter calls in the last couple of weeks. In each case he was furthest away, but first on the scene. In each case he grabbed a shotgun and went in hard to find the problem. All by himself. He's the only one on his department that has sought out training outside of what his department provides.

His character drove him to be better. Not the other way around.


You're not wrong, but you're still missing the fundamental reason for the *why*.

The point that I made, that no one likes, is that the character you describe is vanishingly rare. The character to run into incoming rifle fire without hesitation. Where do you propose to find those people like your friend, in sufficient quantities to cover every town in the country? Agencies don't get to raise kids from birth to have good character, they get to hire the few who show up anymore and are crazy enough to put a uniform on and get in a car. Where do agencies get better people from?

No one here has yet to respond as to how they suggest you fill agencies with only the right characters. I keep saying it, and everyone just insults me, makes a TBL comment, or COCs themselves, but. Not. One. Poster. Has been able to explain how you hire sufficient numbers of officers who are Heraclitus's 1 in 100 warrior. One poster just says we should eliminate all law enforcement. I'm quite certain he won't find the resulting society afterwards any better, but at this point no one wants to confront the actual tough questions of human nature.

Real lessons?

* Average officers, confronted with a barricade and incoming gunfire, and a confusing tactical situation, tend to lose momentum and not know what to do.

* If leadership doesn't immediately appear and form a plan, everyone reverts to the lowest level of training: try to find cover and point a muzzle at a potential threat. Leadership can be anyone of any rank, who is willing and able to direct others around them, and be followed. There was at least one supervisor on scene at the beginning. He never appears to take any leadership role. This is the downside of promoting people into supervisory roles on seniority/lack of alternatives/favoritism/anything other than actual leadership talent.

* When multiple agencies arrive on scene, if an effective leader isn't there making plans, everyone loses momentum because they think the other agency has the ball. People tend to think problems are getting solved by others, and revert to waiting for those others to solve the problem.

* When minutes count, SWAT is hours away. Mindset in many places is "wait for SWAT, they'll save us!" That mindset breeds paralysis. Paralysis is death. Everyone in that hallway was told that at some point in their careers, probably hundreds of times, but it's still incredibly hard to overcome when directly experienced.

* We can't know, but I suspect strongly that if you grabbed some of the individual officers and threw them into the same situation, without backup of any kind, at least a couple of them would have moved forward on their own. The more people who show up on scene, the greater the momentum becomes to stand by and wait. I've seen it in my own experiences, from guys who literally ran right into gunfights and kicked ass, but when other situations got too big with too much brass, froze up and lost all initiative.

* The lack of rifle-rated armor, and familiarity with such, is a huge psychological hole in a situation like this. The shields in the hallway appear to be IIIA shields, which is to say, almost completely pointless to be there at all. If guys have shields they know can stop incoming rounds, they're way more willing to move into position to take those rounds. The majority of agencies do not issue shields to patrol officers (and offhand I've yet to find a single agency that issues rifle-rated shields to everyone, although ours is in the process of doing so).

* Throwing so many officers into that hallway was pointless. Had the shooter come out the doorway, the crossfire would have been disastrous, and likely taken out half the officers in the hall. It shows a complete lack of coordination on scene.

* Possession of a rifle does not make one a warrior. Everyone likes to associate the two together, but this is GD's least favorite truth: the weapon is merely a tool. The mindset to fight and die with it is something else entirely, that doesn't come bundled with any PSA Daily Deal.


More arm-waving nonsense. They had the training, they had the equipment, they had everything they needed to end the threat. Yet they did not. Cowards all. That is the truth. Your fellow officers in the hallway were cowards and should never hold a badge again. If you support them in any way, shape, or form, neither should you.




Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:17:02 PM EST
[#43]
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:18:01 PM EST
[#44]
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There are some men on that video that will be ashamed for the rest of their days.
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I didn't see any men in that video.

Yellow bellied white liver chickens, but no men.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:18:44 PM EST
[#45]
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At last, an actual response that addresses the salient point!

Let's say we do it. How extreme does it need to be? Are we talking motivation by fear, or by shame? If fear, nothing less than public execution could be considered, I'd say. So let's hang every LEO there high, and let them rot for a week.

What occurs next?

The entire profession, nationwide, is already teetering on the edge of collapse. Realistically almost every city with a population of 6 digits or more has been running on emergency staffing for months or years by now. How many more will quit? How many will decline to apply to replace the quit officers? Any machine has a limit to how far it can redline before it falls apart, and what you're suggesting has a very good chance of causing exactly that across large portions of the country. The resulting death toll is guaranteed to be far higher than any school shooting in history. Is it still worth doing?

And the better question yet might be, how well do you expect that threat to really work? The Soviets had to place armed commissars behind the front lines to herd them forward at gunpoint, despite an overwhelming awareness amongst the Red Army that any failure at all would result in execution. I would submit to you that no threat of capital punishment at a distant time in the future is going to outweigh the immediacy of incoming gunfire, particularly in a voluntary profession.

While I thank you for addressing my point, I fail to see how it presents a viable solution for anything going forward. And as far as I'm concerned, everyone here who is blindly rageposting and not providing coherent arguments is fully worthy of being ignored or scorned, because it's precisely that unwillingness to confront hard truths that allows Uvaldes and Parklands to happen.
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Everything you say is from the heart. And well and fine and true. And yet none of it makes a damn bit of difference in answering one simple question:

How do you prevent the next Uvalde?

Publicly punish the cowards who displayed depraved indifference and allowed people to die by stopping those who wanted to actually stop the shooter.

I'm also okay with perpetually shaming people that defend their cowardly behavior.


At last, an actual response that addresses the salient point!

Let's say we do it. How extreme does it need to be? Are we talking motivation by fear, or by shame? If fear, nothing less than public execution could be considered, I'd say. So let's hang every LEO there high, and let them rot for a week.

What occurs next?

The entire profession, nationwide, is already teetering on the edge of collapse. Realistically almost every city with a population of 6 digits or more has been running on emergency staffing for months or years by now. How many more will quit? How many will decline to apply to replace the quit officers? Any machine has a limit to how far it can redline before it falls apart, and what you're suggesting has a very good chance of causing exactly that across large portions of the country. The resulting death toll is guaranteed to be far higher than any school shooting in history. Is it still worth doing?

And the better question yet might be, how well do you expect that threat to really work? The Soviets had to place armed commissars behind the front lines to herd them forward at gunpoint, despite an overwhelming awareness amongst the Red Army that any failure at all would result in execution. I would submit to you that no threat of capital punishment at a distant time in the future is going to outweigh the immediacy of incoming gunfire, particularly in a voluntary profession.

While I thank you for addressing my point, I fail to see how it presents a viable solution for anything going forward. And as far as I'm concerned, everyone here who is blindly rageposting and not providing coherent arguments is fully worthy of being ignored or scorned, because it's precisely that unwillingness to confront hard truths that allows Uvaldes and Parklands to happen.


Hogwash as usual. The hard truth is the cops in the hallway were cowards. Period. They deserve criminal charges. That is the hard truth.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:20:09 PM EST
[#46]
Quoted:
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Quoted:

Publicly punish the cowards who displayed depraved indifference and allowed people to die by stopping those who wanted to actually stop the shooter.

I'm also okay with perpetually shaming people that defend their cowardly behavior.
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Quoted:
Quoted:


Everything you say is from the heart. And well and fine and true. And yet none of it makes a damn bit of difference in answering one simple question:

How do you prevent the next Uvalde?

Publicly punish the cowards who displayed depraved indifference and allowed people to die by stopping those who wanted to actually stop the shooter.

I'm also okay with perpetually shaming people that defend their cowardly behavior.


At last, an actual response that addresses the salient point!

Let's say we do it. How extreme does it need to be? Are we talking motivation by fear, or by shame? If fear, nothing less than public execution could be considered, I'd say. So let's hang every LEO there high, and let them rot for a week.

What occurs next?

The entire profession, nationwide, is already teetering on the edge of collapse. Realistically almost every city with a population of 6 digits or more has been running on emergency staffing for months or years by now. How many more will quit? How many will decline to apply to replace the quit officers? Any machine has a limit to how far it can redline before it falls apart, and what you're suggesting has a very good chance of causing exactly that across large portions of the country. The resulting death toll is guaranteed to be far higher than any school shooting in history. Is it still worth doing?

And the better question yet might be, how well do you expect that threat to really work? The Soviets had to place armed commissars behind the front lines to herd them forward at gunpoint, despite an overwhelming awareness amongst the Red Army that any failure at all would result in execution. I would submit to you that no threat of capital punishment at a distant time in the future is going to outweigh the immediacy of incoming gunfire, particularly in a voluntary profession.

While I thank you for addressing my point, I fail to see how it presents a viable solution for anything going forward. And as far as I'm concerned, everyone here who is blindly rageposting and not providing coherent arguments is fully worthy of being ignored or scorned, because it's precisely that unwillingness to confront hard truths that allows Uvaldes and Parklands to happen.


If we punish the cops for their negligence that lead to deaths then cops will quit.  That's the core of your argument?  

If so, you're writing "Defund the police" talking points.  
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:23:05 PM EST
[#47]
Maybe someday there will be a three sided epitath

One side for the victims, one side for the officers who did breach, one side for all the cowards.

There may be another edge to this. Too early to tell.
Arredondo said all the children were deceased when he went in.
With the audio scrubbed of the screams and cries, he is backed up in that assumption.
Was the editing done for that reason ?

Maybe we'll find out.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:29:59 PM EST
[#48]
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unreal

they stood there at the end of the hallway while that guy killed kids.

they just stood there in case he came out of the room.they could shoot down the hallway.

I have no words



The punisher screen saver is fucking epic.

https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/463094/2DC5B435-793B-483D-BDFC-B01B7B1BBF66_jpe-2451380.JPG
I think he'd been getting calls/texts indicating his wife had been shot.  How effective do we expect this guy to be?
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:34:15 PM EST
[#49]
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Quoted:
But does an active shooter class really prepare police officers to link up with other patrol officers and do a room entry against an armed suspect? Particularly a day or weekend class awhile ago?
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But does an active shooter class really prepare police officers to link up with other patrol officers and do a room entry against an armed suspect? Particularly a day or weekend class awhile ago?



There are multiple things that are covered in such classes but its wrong to think of it as just an "active shooter" class.  Officers should be learning stuff that can be applied to multiple situations.  So instead of "active shooter"; think a class that covers breaching, shooting, decision making and room entries.



I don't think that's the problem, there was some morale or psychological problem or something. I'm probably using the wrong terms but this was more than "those guys are chicken" it was a problem of unit cohesion and morale. Once a recognized leader showed up and lead the charge most of the "stalled" police seemed willing to join in the attack.



Oh there is a leadership issue present there and on that scene it isnt the chief.
Link Posted: 7/13/2022 3:34:24 PM EST
[#50]
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Quoted:
I think he'd been getting calls/texts indicating his wife had been shot.  How effective do we expect this guy to be?
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well, I certainly would hope he'd be more motivated than stand around in a hallway while my wife bleeds out.


Apparently not.


Eta: he was a cop so the divorce papers were probably pending.
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