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SWAT MOVIE- COLIN FARRELL- FIRING RANGE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4NZLbzchMLI
FERGUSON POLICE- READY FOR A RACE WAR..
charlie sheen- movie: Navy Seals..
HANDS UP DONT SHOOT!!
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http://wane.com/2014/11/12/sheriffs-department-gets-patrol-rifles/
Sheriff’s department gets patrol rifles
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Sheriff’s department gets patrol rifles
ALLEN COUNTY, Ind. (WANE) – More Allen County Sheriff’s Departmentofficers will soon have rifles. The sheriff said it’s an effort to make sure his officers aren’t outgunned by the suspects.
“As the climate in our nation changes, it became evident we needed to step up the tools we have in our tool box,” Allen County Sheriff Ken Fries said. “Suspects have these [rifles]. You see in the news nationwide where police are outgunned by suspects. I don’t want that to ever happen here.”
The department spent around $40,000 on 40 SQS15 rifles, an AR-style semi-automatic rifle made by BCI Defense in Bremen, Indiana.
“Keeping money in the state of Indiana was important to me,” Fries said. “That money stays here, jobs stay here and that helps the economy.”
BCI Defense machines almost all the parts for the rifles itself.
“We know law enforcement officers use these to save lives. That makes us make sure the quality is the highest standards and the dependability of the parts we use, the assembly we do and the testing we do is thorough. It makes us humble to be able to provide officers with the right tools,” James Brown, CEO of BCI Defense, said.
The SWAT team already has 17 tactical rifles. The 40 new rifles will be distributed between officers in several divisions including detective, warrants and patrol. To qualify to carry one of the SQS15s, officers have to have a department-issued squad car and complete at 40-hour patrol rifle class that include classroom time and a shooting test.
“Any bullets outside the target and you don’t get a rifle. We’re accountable for every round,” Fries said.
The first ten officers will test to qualify to have a rifle on Friday. Fries hopes to have all 40 distributed by February. He also hopes the department will get more in the future.
“When something happens and you have someone shooting, if police can’t stop it, there are going to be many more victims,” Fries said. “That’s what we hope to limit. Hopefully no officer will have to use one of these guns. That’s our hope. But, if they do, I want to make sure they’re prepared to do what they have to do to save lives.”
Fries said not only are more and more criminals becoming more heavily armed, some are actually targeting police.
“This happened in Indiana. An after-hours alarm went off and the business owner said to call it off because it was probably a bad alarm and the police didn’t go. But, on the video, you could see the suspect barricade himself inside the business and he was waiting for police to show up with a rifle,” Fries said. “He was waiting for police to get there and he was going to target the officers as they got there. Luckily, he didn’t get the chance to shoot somebody, but he’s still out there. He’s still a concern and for every one of those, there’s a hundred more out there. Society’s not getting better.”
Officers already have a handgun and shotgun issued to them, but Fries and the rifles will be more appropriate for some situations. They are more accurate from longer distances.
“It could also be an assignment they’re going to and they already know they’ll be facing someone with a rifle or who is heavily armed,” Cpl. Bob Heffner, the department’s head firearms instructor, said. “A handgun’s not a fair fight if someone has a rifle.”
Many Indiana State Police troopers and Fort Wayne police officers already have rifles in their squad cars. Both departments allow officers to buy on their own rifles that meet certain requirements. Then the department will provide the training and testing necessary for the officer to qualify to carry the rifle in his or her patrol car.
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