Posted on 05/11/2005 12:15:34 PM PDT by holymoly
Bullet from assault rifle winds up in supervisor's hood.
Police in Glens Falls say one of their cruisers was accidentally shot by one of their own officers.
Police officials say Capt. Stanley Wood was training with the department's new assault rifle when he fired a round into the hood of the supervisors' patrol car.
Officials say Stanley, a 33-year veteran of the force, was using one of the department's new AR-15 assault rifles during a training session at the department's shooting range.
The bullet came to rest in the car's engine compartment and no one was hurt.
Officials say no disciplinary action was planned.
"Police officials say Capt. Stanley Wood was training with the department's new assault rifle when he fired a round into the hood of the supervisors' patrol car. "
Wonder if the Supervisor was sitting in it. Also wonder what his last performance rating was from that Supervisor.
I've shot with a lot of cops over the last few years, so I'm not defending the typical police officer's shooting abilities... lol
But, I can see this easily happening with anyone unfamiliar with the AR-15. Why? I'd guess the officer was practicing firing the rifle from behind the cruiser, using it for cover.
As shown in your picture, the sights on an AR-16 are about 2.5 inches above the axis of the barrel. So, the shooter can actually have the AR-15's sights perfectly on target, but if standing close behind cover, is actually shooting 2.5 inches lower - often directly into whatever he/she is using for cover. Cops are taught to get low behind cover while shooting and expose as little of themselves as possible, making this a likely scenario.
Fletcher J
Not true, AR-15 was Colts original terminology, and applies to both select fire and semi-auto only versions. M-16 is the military designation and, AFAIK, only applies to select fire versioins, regardless of manufacturer. In fact the Belgian company, Fabrique Nationel(sic) makes most of the current -A2 varients in a US plant. Colt makes the M-4 carbine versions. (Last I knew anyway).
Ping (duck! up thar in the north country)
I suspect a Captain outranks a Supervisor, but I must confess I'm not all that familiar with police rank structure terminology. Supervisor may be a position or job title rather than a rank.
Actually the AR-15 predates the M-16. I carried an AR-15 in Vietnam in 1962, when it was being tested by the Advanced Research Projects Agency. When the Army adopted it officially, it became the M-16. There were some modifications along the way, so the original AR-15 and the M-16 were not completely identical.
:D
I have to ask...has the car retained counsel yet? This could get ugly.
Barney Fife: "Gee, Andy, can't I have another bullet?"
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