Posted on 02/23/2018 5:52:00 AM PST by Sopater
My uncle John is a retired Los Angeles police officer. He doesnt like to talk about it, but if I buy him enough drinks, hell tell how he captured an armed bad guy on the streets of LA, although my uncle was off-duty and unarmed.
The story involves car chases, foot chases, and a shotgunand the guy holding it wasnt my uncle. Fortunately, everything worked out that day, and a dangerous criminal was off the streets because my uncle risked his lifeoff the clock.
I think about my Uncle John every time I read an all-too-frequent report like this one: The armed school resource officer assigned to protect students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School took a defensive position outside the school and did not enter the building while the shooter was killing students and teachers inside [all emphasis added] with an AR-15 assault-style rifle, Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said Thursday.
Most Americans are astonished and outraged to hear this. How can a police officerhow can any personstand around listening to innocent kids being shot?
Most Americans dont know this happens all the time. Remember the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando?
As the largest mass shooting [at that time] in modern U.S. history began to unfold, an off-duty police officer working at a gay nightclub exchanged gunfire with the suspect. But three hours passed before one of the nations most revered SWAT teams stormed the building and brought the attack that left 49 people and the gunman dead to an end.
The ISIS-wannabe was in a shoot-out with a cop before he even got in the building. But for some reason, the cop didnt follow him in. Shots fired inside. Nothing. Then SWAT waited outside, even as shots rang out from inside the building.
Remember Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Connecticut? Newtown officers arrived at the school while the gunman was still shooting but did not enter the building for more than five minutes, according to a prosecutors report. The state police conducted a comprehensive review of events that day, but didnt interview any Newtown police officers who were the first responders on the scene. Newtown police didnt do their own after-action report, either. Whats to review, right?
This list goes on and on. Up in Canada during the 1898 massacres at Ecole Polytechnique: As officers stood outside in the snow, [the shooter] moved through the corridors looking for more women to kill. Out west in Columbine, as in Orlando, the cops exchanged fire with the killers, then waited outside as 10 people were gunned down. The police waited outside. Listening.
The sinking feeling we have as we read these stories isnt anger. Its betrayal. Our police are supposed to be better than that. We honor them, we tell our kids to look up to them, we buy them lunch, donate to their charities, we believe in them. Thats because we believe theyve made a commitment to endanger their own lives to protect ours.
Only not everyone is in on the deal, apparently. Over the years as a radio talk host, Ive had a dozen or so callers claiming to be cops who angrily insisted that, as one put it Our first job is to make sure we go home to our families safe at night.
My response was to suggest that, somewhere, there was a mall missing a security guard. For real cops, if someone is going to get shoteither an innocent civilian or themselvestheir job is to take that bullet if they absolutely must.
So why do so many cops stand outside and do nothing while kids are being killed? Well, cowardice, for one thing. No, not all cops are cowards, thats ridiculous. I know from personal experience thats not true. But theyre not all heroes, either.
Ask yourself this: Could you stand outside and listen to high school kids get shot and do nothing? Particularly if you had a gun and the training to use it? Wouldnt every cell in your body scream for you to run inside and kill that SOB?
So why do good cops wait? Training. Its part of a tactical approach currently debated by police departments across the country. Before Columbine, everyone pretty much waited: Set up a perimeter, wait for SWAT, go in with mass firepower and a strategy to reduce civilian casualties. That doesnt work if all the civilians are already dead.
So the strategy changedor was supposed to. But as weve seen again and again, in some places, it hasnt. This brings up the conversation nobody wants to have: Its a lot easier to police good people than bad ones.
Sheriff Scott Israel, whose department had dozens of encounters with the Parkland shooter before the massacre but failed to take action, was on CNN insisting that the solution to gun crime is out of his hands. So he wants to get guns out of yours. Hes demanding restrictions on the gun rights of lawful citizens.
He couldnt figure out how to get the information about the Parkland psycho into the background-check system, which would have stopped an actual bad guy from legally buying a gun. Instead, he wants to stop everyone. Why? Because law-abiding citizens abide by the law. We do what theyre told. Were easy to police. So his failures are apparently on us to solve by giving up our rights.
The same with suburban teenagers posting crazy stuff on the Internet. Israel also wants police to have the power to detain people without a warrant, take them in against their will, and give them a government -authorized evaluation of some kindall based on a police officers opinion that youve posted something disturbing on the web. Hey, there are plenty of angst-ridden teen boys out there to roust, and cops like Israel are more than happy to do it.
Scaring dopey teens and banning AR-15s is easy. Following up on truly dangerous people, building a case about their mental health, getting the evidence a judge needs to actthats hard work. So is going into a building where shots are being fired. Cops arent heroes for doing easy. They are heroesand most of them arefor doing the hard stuff.
Organizational Failure - bump for later...
The school job is certain political reward for services rendered to the political machine running the broward county Utopia
Kumbaya kills kids
Police officers don’t want to act if they shoot a suspect and are left out to hang to dry by their brass.
Its just politically correct and safer to do nothing.
This has got me thinking...A coward, but because he was afraid for his own skin? Or afraid of lawsuits? An expression has been coined: Stay Fetal. Was his cowardice a character flaw? Or policy?
Any teacher who wants to carry should be allowed to after proper training. Maybe they could be deputized for in-school purposes.
The heroes were a coach and a couple ROTC kids who were not armed. A badge and a gun does not a hero make in the real world.
If it’s a character flaw, then it’s down to one bad hire. If Stay Fetal is district and county policy, then the problem is systemic and blaming one guy won’t solve it. The policy needs to change.
That said, this officer is sworn to uphold law and to PROTECT and serve!
The best defense against this slaughter is to train and vet teachers and administrators who are on the inside of the building when the slaughter starts with a secretly concealed carry weapon.
Back when that guy went into the texas tower and started shooting people the Texas police and a civilian worked their way up to the top and killed him. Guess cops back then were different.
while students were being shot inside, he “took a defensive position outside”
hmmmm.... In other words he ran and hid.
I am glad this guy quit.
marked ,,,,
I was thinking that same thing. I guess he’ll have a lot of time to figure that out, regardless, his name will forever be linked to cowardice, not institutionalized dysfunction.
I have recently retooled my career to become a nurse (another profession which is placed high on a pedestal) and I find it amazing to watch how decisions are made. No good deed goes unpunished.
Heroes are where you find them. Google “Rodger Wilton Young”,
Meanwhile, ironically he has police protection guarding him and his family. Will THEY take a bullet for him?
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