Posted on 08/15/2007 6:19:19 PM PDT by walkerk
The San Francisco rookie police officer who accidentally shot himself to death fired his weapon while displaying for a female friend how officers are taught to avoid having their guns used against them, law enforcement authorities said Tuesday.
The incident happened at 1:40 a.m. Saturday during a gathering of as many as 15 people at the San Mateo apartment of the 23-year-old officer, James Gustafson Jr.
According to those familiar with the incident, Gustafson was showing his Police Department-issued semiautomatic pistol after removing the clip that stores the rounds. He explained that there are ways an officer can disable a weapon in close proximity to keep it from being fired.
It apparently was part of a demonstration of the department's "weapons retention" procedures. However, there was still a bullet in the chamber.
Gustafson pointed the weapon at his neck and pulled the trigger, shooting himself, according to authorities.
(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
Well, 5, actually. If he was using a 1911 varient, and pushed hard on the barrel, it would not have shot.
The thing was designed to be rode hard on a horse, with no (or minimal) AD’s.
I kind of like that, in a gun.
That’s why I stick with my trusty revolver. I have way too many brain farts to try and deal with a gun like that.
Evidently he was showing ways that "don't disable" a weapon.
Does this story mean police in San Francisco are actually allowed to carry weapons?
2- Take the magazine out anyway, even if you think it's not loaded.
3- Always check the chamber to see if it is loaded, even after the magazine is out.
4- Never point the muzzle at anything you don't intend to shoot.
5- Keep your finger off the trigger unless you intend to shoot something.
6- Never do stupid sh*t at a party or to impress a crowd with a firearm.
7- If you're drinking, don't even think about handling your firearm. See number 6.
I'm sure there are others.
Much the same as my glocks. Pull the trigger it goes bang, don't pull the trigger it doesn't.
About as simple as one can get, just like my revolvers.
My thoughts exactly.
Imagine his surprise when he pulled the trigger and put a round through his thigh, calf, and foot (it takes talent to hit yourself three times with the same round) and ended up in the hospital for several weeks.
That's a good reminder for everyone. Chances of that happening are very low however if it does, someone can get dead
“How about the “gun is always to be considered loaded, never point your weapon at something you aren’t willing to destroy, fire only when you can identify your target and what lies behind it...”
If you even look at a gun, you should be thinking that. That’s part of the safety training.
“SF Police..... sad. If this was at a party, do you think that alcohol might have been involved?”
I won’t go to the range if I’m run down, ill, or even just a little bit sleepy!
i was taught one step further. a visual/physical inspection. look down the chamber and stick your pinky in the chamber hole to make sure it’s clear. just don’t let the slide go while your finger is in there! i always thought it was a weird rule...
I think the guys that got a deer that day were basically standing around smoking cigarettes and the unnerved deer just happened to run into their muzzles at a moment when they were not munching on sandwiches.
http://www.thefiringline.com/Misc/safetyrules.html
Jeff Cooper's Rules of Gun Safety
They have value for dogfaces and grunts. However they have proven to be unsafe. Police Officer Safety Training (POST) train with Cooper rules Many years ago the NRA used the Cooper rules; Why do I point the gun in a safe direction? Why do I keep my finger off the trigger? I don't load a gun until I plan to use it. In addition to training NRA Certified Instructors in all disciplines Here are the rules which are safer than Cooper rules:
Always keep your finger off the trigger until ready to shoot Always keep the gun unloaded until ready to useI am quite familiar with Col. Cooper's rules.
Which is where they were developed during WWII.
which is why they have fools like the subject of this thread.
His rules proved to be unsafe, the NRA training dept
spent years developing safer rules. They are much safer:
Because until I inspect the chamber, I assume it is loaded.
Because I assume that it is loaded until I inspect the chamber.
I'm a Chief Range Safety Officer training NRA Certified Range Safety Officers
and I also teach the development of Standard Operating Procedures for the operation of
both indoor and outdoor ranges in all disciplines. Always keep the gun pointed in a safe direction
I too am a former firearms instuctor tho my certification has expired many years ago.
That first rule, “Never point or allow a gun under your control to point at anything you would not want to see destroyed.” Is the best one.
I think many instructors list the “every gun is loaded” as the first one and it is a good rule but I still think the controlling the muzzle is the most important.
I hear there’s an opening.
I know that. There are a lot of openings at the SFPD. They are very understaffed, but they are not interested in straight white males with a sense of right and wrong who know how to handle and respect firearms. Don’t get me wrong the rank and file officers I have met have been great. Its their bureaucracy that is infested with PC BS and are looking for, as was quoted to me “ A culturally and ethnically diverse selection of officers. In other words, Whitey unless you got relatives or connections on the force look somewhere else
Every January, we'd have the Klondike Derby out on post (this is the camping trip where you are supposed to drag a dog-sled through the snow to different outposts and perform various cold-weather survival skills, but it never snowed for us and we'd usually end up out there in shorts and t-shirts), and for years we were in this one patch of woods over near the hospital, where it was relatively safe. Then, my next-to-last year of scouting, they were tearing down the old barracks buildings on that part of post, so we had to go out to an old training site near Camp Carlson.
We had to move old belts of .30 and .50-caliber ammunition in order to drive our tent stakes into the ground (I kid you not on this), and the next day, my dad had some idiot walk up to him carrying an old tank simulator round and asked him what it was. My dad's response was to quickly back up and inform the guy that he needed to carefully put it on the ground because it was the same as a stick of dynamite.
They had the EOD guys out there that evening, making sure that nobody tried to take anything home with them (this was about two months after a couple of kids found a case of old hand grenades at another base and were carrying them home in their backpacks when they went off), and they moved the Derby back to its old location the next year.
Your mentioning of how the deer were bagged reminds me of my grandfather's last hunting trip to Fort Knox. He was either 74 or 75 at the time, so we'd been out early and scouted out a good spot just a few hundred feet from where we parked, and we got him situated on his camp stool under a cedar tree.
A few hours later, just after sunrise, my dad and I were a couple hundred yards away when we heard a shot from his area. We walked over and there was grandpa, sound asleep under the tree, with a nice three-point buck (it would have been a four-pointer, but one antler had snapped off earlier in the year). Grandpa had been sound asleep under the tree when he heard the deer pussy-footing past him (it's awfully hard to sneak past combat veterans). He opened his eyes, spotted the deer (who knew something was wrong but didn't know what), lifted his shotgun, and pulled the trigger. If he'd wanted to, Grandpa probably could have bopped the deer over the head with his shotgun, it was that close. Once he made sure it was dead, he settled back under the tree and went back to sleep.
Plus, the DA sucks, the Mayor truly sucks, and the Chief of Police is a complete dingbat who makes it very difficult for me to believe that she really is a sworn LEO. No cop with talent or brains stays on the SFPD very long after they've paid off their debt to the city for academy training, ajnd there's been stories here on FR lately about the 'blue bleed' that SF suffers when rookie cops get the academy training, do their minimum time, and skeedaddle for a decent department. Small wonder: San Francisco is a particularly violent and seedy town that hates it's law enforcement. Criminals are a protected and celebrated species there.
Glad I left. Don't miss a thing from San Francisco. The few things in California that I do miss are all down in Los Angeles.
Eff that. No way would I point a gun at anybody I didn't intend to kill. Screw the CCL that's just freaking nuts.
Obviously he had a firearms safety class from the police department, and not from the “irresponsible” NRA.
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