Shiny, let's be bad guys.
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- Posts: 966
- Joined: Wed Jul 18, 2018 4:17 pm
- Location: Pensacola to Key West & In-Between
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Shiny, let's be bad guys.
Today was training day and I was the bad guy.
At my disposal was two simmunition G17s and a Remington 870 with five subcaliber devices for .38 Special FX ammo.
My playground was the Pat Thomas Shoot House. The scenario was a two man unit is dispatched to the location in an attempt to locate another officer that they lost contact with. They arrive and find him laid out. Other than that, the ball is in my court. Oh, they also had to retrieve their AR from the trunk.
It was also cold as hell. About 35°F in thr morning.
In the end, playing bad guy is still a good experience since you practice cover, concealment, reloading, and advancing on other through violence of attack since you pin them in an ambush.
My gun channel - New Wave Firearms
FL Director & National Spokeman for Gun Owners of America - Join GOA at discount
Communism - 20th Century Mass Murder Champions
FL Director & National Spokeman for Gun Owners of America - Join GOA at discount
Communism - 20th Century Mass Murder Champions
I <3 my 17T... I wish it wasn't like pulling teeth to get it, or get ammo for it...
So, did you win?
"The essential American soul is hard, isolate, stoic, and a killer. It has never yet melted."
I remember when I was playing the bad guy for FLPD. Lots of fun.
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- Posts: 966
- Joined: Wed Jul 18, 2018 4:17 pm
- Location: Pensacola to Key West & In-Between
- Contact:
My gun channel - New Wave Firearms
FL Director & National Spokeman for Gun Owners of America - Join GOA at discount
Communism - 20th Century Mass Murder Champions
FL Director & National Spokeman for Gun Owners of America - Join GOA at discount
Communism - 20th Century Mass Murder Champions
When going through such training one doesn’t forget it. Especially if he’s the one who gets shot. I know because my son played the bad guy and shot my partner. He went on for years on how my son got the drop on him. He did it by climbing up on a closet shelf and shoot down. When doing building searches from then on he never ignored the high ground.