Can you make good decisions - and
would your peers agree?
Monday, May 04, 2009 Filed in:
Techniques &
Training, Legal Issues
The March issue of Force Science News
contained a very
interesting article about how police and private citizens differ in
their views of "justified" shootings.
While some may see the article as having application to law
enforcement only, they would be wrong - it is well worth reading
because it deals with differences in perception of a critical
incident, differences which are not necessarily "cops vs.
civilians" but more like "trained vs. untrained."
Private citizens are both more critical of decisions to shoot, yet
simultaneously less skilled in making those decisions themselves.
This has grave implications for those who carry concealed weapons
for self-defense; it suggests that an untrained person might shoot
with less justification, while at the same time be held to scrutiny
that is not commensurate with the risks of an evolving
scenario.
My take on the research is that it is imperative the person
carrying a defensive firearm be very well trained in the judicious
use of deadly force. (Sadly, very few are.) At the same time, that
person has to retain defense counsel who can educate a jury in the
dynamics of a deadly encounter, so that they can judge the
defendant's actions more realistically. You need to be able to show
the jury what you knew, and when you knew it.
Think carefully: how's your knowledge of the judicious use of
force?
-=[
Grant ]=-